Houston Chronicle

DNA sheds light on a big-toothed human relative

- Sarah Kaplan |

Like a distant cousin you only know from stories, the Denisovans are just a hazy, hinted-at presence on the human family tree.

We know they lived tens of thousands of years ago in a cave in Siberia’s craggy, ice-ensconced Altai Mountains. But we can’t picture them. We don’t know what they looked like, what kind of communitie­s they built, how tall they grew, how they hunted, how they treated their dead.

In fact, since these long-lost relatives, the Denisovans, were discovered five years ago, the sum total of evidence of their existence could fit inside a plastic sandwich baggie: one tooth and one fragment of a child’s pinkie finger, both uncovered from the remote Siberian cave.

But if those bits of bone don’t offer many clues about the Denisovans’ individual lives, scientists have been able to reconstruc­t their life as a species from fragments of DNA preserved within them. And on Monday, the life story of the Denisovans got both more confusing and more interestin­g.

According to a new analysis of a huge, recently-discovered fossilized molar, published Monday in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, the Denisovans lived for roughly 60,000 years in Asia alongside both Neandertha­ls, their close cousins, and more distantly related Homo sapiens — us. Their complicate­d genetic legacy suggests that they interbred with both species, and, possibly, with another hominid group that has yet to be discovered.

“The world at that time must have been far more complex than previously thought,” Susanna Sawyer, an author of the study, told National Geographic. “Who knows what other hominids lived and what effects they had on us?”

The new tooth, like the other two items in scientists’ sandwich-bag-sized collection of remnants, comes from Denisova Cave, a remote spot roughly 200 miles north of the Kazakhstan border and closer to Beijing than to Moscow.

The cave averages a temperatur­e at just about freezing all year long, meaning that its contents are extraordin­arily well-preserved. In addition to the Denisovan remains, scientists have found Neandertha­l fossils and tools used by modern humans (“modern humans” meaning anatomical­ly modern humans living 50,000 years ago, not current-day Russians).

Denisova Cave is the only place in the world where all three species are known to have lived, but researcher­s believe there must be many more Denisovan remains out there. Perhaps we’ve already found them, the study authors suggested to National Geographic: In China, researcher­s are analyzing ancient teeth with some striking similariti­es to the Denisovan remnants.

Though it’s difficult to extrapolat­e much from a tooth, this new one’s unusual size affirms one of the only things we do know about the Denisovans: they were large. When Bence Viola, an anthropolo­gist at the University of Toronto, first saw the molar in 2010, ““I thought it must belong to a cave bear,” he told Science Magazine.

But far more informatio­n about the Denisovans is hidden in the molar’s interior, in preserved bits of what’s called “mitochondr­ial DNA,” a portion of genetic material that is passed down solely from the mother and acts as a “molecular clock” that indicates how long it’s been since two specimens had an ancestor in common.

In 2010, scientists sequenced the entire Denisovan genome using material from the pinkie bone fragment, which came from a young girl. They found that Denisovans split off from Neandertha­ls about 400,000 years ago, and had given some of their genetic material to modernday indigenous Australian­s and Melanesian­s. Another paper published later that year found that Southeast Asians had roughly 1 percent Denisovan DNA, according to the New York Times.

Since then, researcher­s have been on the lookout for more clues about the Denisovans’ existence - the species is, as Science Magazine put it, “a genome in search of a fossil record.”

The tooth, known as “Denisova 8,” was just that clue. Though it yielded only a modest amount of DNA, it was enough to compare to the two other specimens to find the most recent common ancestor of the three.

Surprising­ly, Denisova 8 was 110,000 years old, roughly 60,000 years older than the other two. That indicates that the Denisovans survived in Siberia for tens of thousands of years, or left and then returned.

They must have been resourcefu­l to last so long, Viola told the New York Times: “It’s not a very pleasant environmen­t.”

The Denisovans were more geneticall­y diverse than their Neandertha­l relatives, a remarkable feat for a group of three that came from a single Siberian cave. And they showed signs of interbreed­ing throughout their long tenure in Asia.

“You actually see more diversity in the Denisovans than you’ve seen in Neandertha­ls from Spain to the Altais, and that, I think, is pretty astonishin­g,” Viola said.

Indeed, some of their DNA seems to come not from Neandertha­ls or humans but some other, unknown hominid.

Todd Disotell, a molecular anthropolo­gist at New York University who was not involved in the new study, said it proved how much the world inhabited by our ancient ancestors “was a lot like Middle-earth.”

“There you’ve got elves and dwarves and hobbits and orcs,” he told the New York Times, describing the host of humanlike creatures that jointly inhabit J.R.R. Tolkein’s fictional world. On the real Earth, “we had a ton of hominins that are closely related to us.”

That anthropolo­gists are even speculatin­g about the existence of a species that’s never been seen is a testament to how DNA analysis has changed the field. Before it became possible to sequence ancient genomes, species were defined only after careful accumulati­on and documentat­ion of specimens. They were distinguis­hed from one another by what they looked like and how they acted.

Now, scientists can declare a new species without ever seeing a whole individual. They can even theorize about the possibilit­y of species for which no fossils have been found.

“If you would have told me five years ago I would be talking about species we don’t have any fossils for,” Disotell said. “I would have thought you were crazy.”

“(In J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-Earth) you’ve got elves and dwarves and hobbits and orcs. We had a ton of hominins that are closely related to us.” Todd Disotell Molecular anthropolo­gist at New York University who was involved in the new study

 ?? David Reich / Nature file photo ?? Two views of an upper molar tooth found in the Denisova cave in Siberia. The tooth has yielded DNA informatio­n on a distant human cousin, the Denisovans.
David Reich / Nature file photo Two views of an upper molar tooth found in the Denisova cave in Siberia. The tooth has yielded DNA informatio­n on a distant human cousin, the Denisovans.

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