The Star Malaysia

She’s a baby girl

Mystery solved: Tiny skeleton measuring less than 15.3cm in length belonged to a human girl with a combinatio­n of rare genetic defects.

- By MELISSA HEALY

IN the 14 years since it was found in an abandoned mining town in Chile’s Atacama Desert, the bizarre six-inch (15.24cm) skeleton has inspired fervid speculatio­n, including theories of unearthly origins.

It had 10 pairs of ribs – two fewer than the normal human complement – and an elongated skull with a pronounced point.

Despite its diminutive size, the proportion of its limbs and torso suggested this was a human.

Was this a stillborn baby? A nonhuman primate of some sort? An alien being?

Now, genetic science has given these mummified remains a species (Homo sapiens), a gender (female), an age (she probably died shortly after birth) and as many as 52 genetic clues to her extreme physical abnormalit­ies (her bones appear to have aged at an accelerate­d pace).

Not surprising­ly, it has also narrowed her ancestry to a mix of peoples typical of those who settled the remote corner of Chile in which her remains were lovingly tucked into a pouch.

Her genes suggest her ancestry was largely European, and to a lesser extent, East Asian.

The mummified skeleton has been called “Ata”, and starting roughly four years ago, researcher­s from Stanford University and the University of California (UC), San Francisco, isolated and purified its DNA from marrow inside its tiny, preserved bones.

Then they put a new generation of genetic sequencing technology to work.

Some of the genetic mutations they found have not been recorded before – not so surprising in a field in which the function of most genes, and of whole genetic regions, remains a mystery.

Some mutations were probably carried and bequeathed by one parent only. Others appear to have been contribute­d by both.

Still other mutations may have arisen spontaneou­sly – a mystery that, in the absence of Ata’s parents’ genes, will probably endure.

But among the welter of mutations they found were a half-dozen or more abnormalit­ies in genes known to be associated with conditions such as dwarfism, scoliosis and musculoske­letal abnormalit­ies.

During foetal developmen­t, and possibly in the few days of life she probably survived, those appear to have caused her bones to fuse and age at an unusual pace.

By the time she succumbed, probably to breathing or feeding difficulti­es, or complicati­ons of a likely premature birth, the infant’s bones and the ways in which they had fused gave her the skeletal structure of a child between six and eight years old.

The number of mutations affecting bone structure and growth was “well beyond what you’d expect by chance”, said Stanford researcher Dr Garry Nolan, the first academic researcher to be called in on the Ata case.

The authors of the study, published recently in the journal Genome Research, speculated that the nitrate mining that had drawn settlers to the region in which Ata was found, may have exposed her pregnant mother to some environmen­tal toxin that contribute­d to the genetic wreckage.

But it may as easily have been a chance event.

When it came to genetic mutations affecting the structure and growth of bones, said Dr Nolan, the child won a sort of grim lottery, “which unfortunat­ely was a death sentence”.

“It’s rare – very, very rare” to find so many mutations related to the same systems in a single person, he said. “But if you roll the dice enough times, you’re going to come up snake eyes. And that’s what happened with this unfortunat­e child.”

Dr Nolan was first asked by a documentar­y filmmaker to consult on the case of Ata’s remains, which had made their way into a private collection in Barcelona, Spain.

The producers of the film, titled Sirius, suggested it was evidence of alien life on Earth.

“This ended up on our doorstop like a basket,” said Dr Nolan, who directs the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute’s Proteomics Center for Systems Immunology at Stanford.

“It first was a curiosity. Then, it became a learning opportunit­y, a chance to ask questions without presupposi­ng an answer.”

The remains of a child like Ata do arouse intense curiosity, but they also teach scientists some valuable lessons about genetics, says Dr Atul Butte, who conducted the genetic sequencing and co-authored the new study.

“Kids come in all the time now with unusual syndromes, and we use genetic analysis to help explain what we’re seeing,” said Dr Butte, a professor of medicine and expert in paediatric genetic diseases at UC San Francisco. “Most of the time we’re looking for one gene that’s gone wrong.”

What geneticist­s are learning, he said, “is that you shouldn’t stop at one. There might be many mutations” that contribute to an observed abnormalit­y.

It happens, as Ata’s case demonstrat­es. “We tend to love Occam’s razor,” the philosophi­cal principle that challenges scientists to look for the simplest solution to a problem, Dr Butte said. “But maybe there’s more than one thing wrong.”

Dr Nolan, a professor of microbiolo­gy and immunology at Stanford, sees other lessons emerging from Ata’s tiny remains.

By offering evidence for the combined effects of recognised genetic mutations, the study of Ata might guide medical scientists in devising ways to grow bone more quickly.

Or it may prompt geneticist­s to devise a prenatal test that could diagnose some or all of Ata’s abnormalit­ies at the foetal stage, he said.

Dr Nolan said it certainly gives scientists an instructiv­e case study in one of genetic science’s thorniest problems: how to align what they find in the genes with the traits they see in the person (in scientific parlance, how to link genotype with phenotype).

Dr Butte is deeply cautious about scientists’ ability to do that anytime soon.

In his day job, he has seen a single genetic mutation in children with grievous abnormalit­ies, and mutations in “entire chunks of DNA” in children with few, if any, negative effects.

“I still don’t think we understand how unusual ‘normal’ humans can be,” Dr Butte said. “There still could be very many difference­s in humans than we understand. If it’s not humbling, it should be humbling. We’re not even close to that yet.” – Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service

It’s rare – very, very rare. But if you roll the dice enough times, you’re going to come up snake eyes. And that’s what happened with this unfortunat­e child. Dr Garry Nolan, Stanford researcher

 ??  ?? Less than 15.3cm long, this humanoid skeleton was found in 2003 in Chile. Genetic sequencing has establishe­d it belonged to a human female who likely died soon after birth, but whose bones had aged prematurel­y. — Photos: TNS
Less than 15.3cm long, this humanoid skeleton was found in 2003 in Chile. Genetic sequencing has establishe­d it belonged to a human female who likely died soon after birth, but whose bones had aged prematurel­y. — Photos: TNS
 ??  ?? A close-up of the girl’s skull.
A close-up of the girl’s skull.

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