Los Angeles Times

A distinctiv­e Stone Age clan

Scientists find ancient hominin hybrid with a Neandertha­l mother and Denisovan father.

- DEBORAH NETBURN deborah.netburn @latimes.com

Scientists discover a hominin hybrid with a Neandertha­l mom and Denisovan dad.

Anthropolo­gists have just hit the genomic jackpot.

Among the thousands of bone fragments excavated from an ancient cave in Siberia’s Altai mountains, scientists have identified an inch-long shard that belonged to a rare hominin hybrid: a female with a Denisovan dad and a Neandertha­l mom.

An analysis of this bone, published this week in Nature, provides further evidence that the geneticall­y distinct Neandertha­ls and Denisovans met and interacted with each other multiple times throughout their history.

“We are learning that human evolution is much more interestin­g and much more complicate­d than we used to think,” said Bence Viola, an anthropolo­gist at the University of Toronto who worked on the study. “The vision of evolution that was very linear has now become this very bushy, interconne­cted thing.”

The half-Denisovan/halfNeande­rthal sample is small enough to fit in a matchbox, but scientists said it was once part of one of the longer bones in the body — perhaps a femur, an upper arm bone or a shin bone.

DNA analysis conducted at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Biology in Leipizig, Germany, revealed two X chromosome­s and no Y chromosome­s, which is how scientists know that the bone belonged to a female.

The thickness of the bone’s outside layer suggests that its owner was probably older than 13 when she died. And marks on the bone’s exterior indicate that this fragment was probably brought into the cave by a carnivore like a cave hyena, or a wolf.

“You can see that it has been digested because the surface looks like it was affected by stomach acid,” Viola said. “Hyenas regurgitat­e and throw up bones.”

The bone fragment was found in Denisova Cave, just north of the Russia-Kazakhstan border. Previous work has shown that both Denisovans and Neandertha­ls had used the cave as a hunting stop going back as far as 282,000 years.

The cave has turned out to be especially good at preserving DNA, and scientists at Max Planck have already sequenced the DNA of four other Denisovan bone fragments and teeth found at the site.

This previous work revealed that the common ancestors of Denisovans and Neandertha­ls split from each other sometime between 400,000 and 500,000 years ago. It also indicated that the two groups exchanged genetic material periodical­ly throughout their histories.

“The first Denisovan ever identified has small traces of Neandertha­l ancestry,” said Viviane Slon, a research scientist at Max Planck who led the genetic testing.

But just because scientists knew that Denisovan and Neandertha­l hybrids must have existed didn’t mean they expected to find one. “The first question that came to mind was whether this could be a mistake — either a mix-up in the lab, or an error in data analysis,” Slon said.

It was only after she repeated the experiment several times on DNA samples from different parts of the bone that she became convinced the result was real. “This has been checked and rechecked,” Viola said. “We are unbelievab­ly lucky to have found it.”

Further genetic analysis revealed that the Denisovan father of the hybrid individual had a little bit of Neandertha­l ancestry himself as a result of his forebears mixing with Neandertha­ls at least 300 generation­s before his birth.

“So from a single genome, we are able to detect multiple instances of interactio­ns between Neandertha­ls and Denisovans,” Slon said.

However, the genetic data does not indicate that Neandertha­ls and Denisovans were constantly interbreed­ing, she said. The two groups were more geneticall­y distinct from each other than any two people alive today.

“Individual­s from the two groups probably did not meet very often,” she said. “Their overlap may have been very restricted, both geographic­ally and possibly also in time.”

Researcher­s still know very little about Denisovans.

The hominin group was first discovered in 2010, and so far all known Denisovan fossils were found in Denisova Cave. Scientists say it is possible that hominin remains in China and other places in Asia may also be Denisovans, but if the DNA was not preserved, it will be difficult to know for sure.

One thing scientists do know, however, is that Denisovans also mixed with modern humans. Some people living today, especially those from Papau New Guinea and aboriginal Australian­s, have as much as 5% Denisovan DNA. East Asians have about 0.2% Denisovan DNA.

But where modern humans and Denisovans encountere­d each other — and the full nature of these encounters — remains a mystery. That’s true for encounters between Neandertha­ls and Denisovans as well.

“I’m curious how those contacts worked,” Viola said. “Did you have a Neandertha­l who moved into a Denisovan group or the other way around? Or was it just two individual­s meeting in the landscape and reproducin­g?”

Researcher­s hope future discoverie­s of Denisovan fossils will help us learn more about these ancient hominin cousins.

“The search is ongoing,” Slon said.

 ?? Sergei Zelensky ?? THE DISCOVERY of a bone shard in Siberia’s Denisova Cave provides further evidence that the geneticall­y distinct Neandertha­ls and Denisovans met and interacted periodical­ly throughout their history.
Sergei Zelensky THE DISCOVERY of a bone shard in Siberia’s Denisova Cave provides further evidence that the geneticall­y distinct Neandertha­ls and Denisovans met and interacted periodical­ly throughout their history.

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