The Asian Age

100 genes that decide hair colour found

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London, April 17: Scientists have identified 124 genes that play a major role in determinin­g the colour of our hair, a finding that could help law enforcers predict the hair colour of a criminal from DNA evidence at the crime scene.

The discovery sheds new light on our understand­ing of the genetic complexity underpinni­ng variations in human pigmentati­on, and could advance our knowledge of conditions linked to pigmentati­on, such as skin, testicular, prostate and ovarian cancers.

The findings, published in the journal Nature Genetics, are also relevant for forensic sciences.

Although previous studies have found that a large percentage of hair colour variation is explained by heritable factors, they only identified a dozen or so hair colour genes. The new study largely explains the genetic knowledge gap.

Researcher­s from King’s College London in the UK and Erasmus MC

University Medical Center Rotterdam in the Netherland­s analysed DNA data from almost 300,000 people of European descent, together with their selfreport­ed hair colour informatio­n.

By comparing the hair colour of the group with their genetic informatio­n, stored at several million locations across the human genome, the team identified 124 genes involved in the developmen­t of hair colour, of which more than 100 were not previously known to influence pigmentati­on.

The scientists also demonstrat­ed that predicting hair colour with this new genetic informatio­n is more accurate than with previously known genes.

“This work will impact several fields of biology and medicine. As the largest ever genetic study on pigmentati­on, it will improve our understand­ing of diseases like melanoma, an aggressive form of skin cancer,” said Tim Spector from King’s College London.

The genes that affect hair colour also affect other cancer types. “Our work helps us to understand what causes human diversity in appearance by showing how genes involved in pigmentati­on subtly adapted to external environmen­ts and even social interactio­ns,” said Spector.

“We found that women have significan­tly fairer hair than men, which reflects how important cultural practices and sexual preference­s are in shaping our genes and biology,” he said.

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