The Phnom Penh Post

DNA from early man increases Covid risk

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COVID-19 patients with a snippet of Neandertha­l DNA that crossed into the human g e n o me s o me 60,000 years ago run a higher risk of severe complicati­ons from the disease, researcher­s have reported.

People infected with the new coronaviru­s, for example, who carry the genetic coding bequeathed by our early human cousins are three times more likely to need mechanical ventilatio­n, according to a study published on Wednesday in Nature.

There are many reasons why some people with Covid-19 wind up in intensive care and other have only light symptoms, or none at all.

Advanced age, being a man, and pre-existing medi c a l pro bl e ms c a n a l l increase the odds of a serious outcome.

But genetic factors can also play a role, as the new findings makes clear.

“It is striking that the genetic heritage from Neandertha­ls has such tragic consequenc­es during the current pandemic,” said coauthor Svante Paabo, director of the department of genetics at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy.

Recent research by the Covid-19 Host Genetics Initiative revealed that a genetic variant in a particular region of chromosome 3 – one of 23 chromosome­s in the human genome – is associated with more severe forms of the disease.

That same region was known to harbour genetic code of Neandertha­l origins, so Paabo and co-author Hugo Zeberg, also from Max Planck, decided to look for a link with Covid-19.

They found that a Neandertha­l individual from southern Europe carried an almost identical genetic segment, which spans some 50,000 socalled base pairs, the primary building blocks of DNA.

Tellingly, two Neandertha­ls found in southern Siberia, along with a specimen from another early human species that also wandered Eurasia,

the Denisovans, did not carry the telltale snippet.

Modern humans and Neandertha­ls could have inherited the gene fragment from a common ancestor some half-million years ago, but it is far more likely to have entered the Homo sapiens gene pool through more recent interbreed­ing, the researcher­s concluded.

The potentiall­y dangerous string of Neandertha­l DNA is not evenly distribute­d today across the globe, the study showed.

Some 16 per cent of Europeans carry it, and about half the population across South Asia, with the highest proportion – 63 per cent – found in Bangladesh.

This could help explain why individual­s of Bangladesh­i descent living in Britain are twice as likely to die from Covid-19 as the general population, the authors speculate.

In East Asia and Africa the gene variant is virtually absent.

About two per cent of DNA in non-Africans across the globe originate with Neandertha­ls, earlier studies have shown.

Denisovan remnants are also widespread but more sporadic, comprising less than one per cent of the DNA among Asians and Native Americans, and about five per cent of aboriginal Australian­s and the people of Papua New Guinea.

 ?? AFP ?? People infected with Covid-19 who carry a specific snippet of genetic coding bequeathed by Neandertha­ls are three times more likely to need mechanical ventilatio­n.
AFP People infected with Covid-19 who carry a specific snippet of genetic coding bequeathed by Neandertha­ls are three times more likely to need mechanical ventilatio­n.

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