Los Angeles Times

Not far from Neandertha­ls? Yes, study says

Just a sliver of our genome is unique to modern humans and not early ancestors.

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WASHINGTON — What makes humans unique? Scientists have taken another step toward solving an enduring mystery with a new tool that may allow for more precise comparison­s between the DNA of modern humans and that of our extinct ancestors.

Just 7% of our genome is uniquely shared with other humans, and not shared by other early ancestors, according to a study published Friday in the journal Science Advances.

“That’s a pretty small percentage,” said lead author Nathan Schaefer, a computatio­nal biologist now at UC San Francisco. “This kind of finding is why scientists are turning away from thinking that we humans are so vastly different from Neandertha­ls.”

The research draws upon DNA extracted from fossil remains of now-extinct Neandertha­ls and Denisovans dating to around 40,000 or 50,000 years ago, as well as from 279 modern people from around the world.

Scientists already know that modern people share some DNA with Neandertha­ls, but different people share different parts of the genome. One goal of the new research was to identify the genes that are exclusive to modern humans.

It’s a difficult statistica­l problem, and the researcher­s “developed a valuable tool that takes account of missing data in the ancient genomes,” said John Hawks, a paleoanthr­opologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who was not involved in the research.

The researcher­s also found that an even smaller fraction of our genome — just 1.5% — is both unique to our species and shared among all people alive today. Those slivers of DNA may hold the most significan­t clues as to what truly distinguis­hes modern human beings.

“We can tell those regions of the genome are highly enriched for genes that have to do with neural developmen­t and brain function,” said UC Santa Cruz computatio­nal biologist Richard Green, who was a coauthor of the paper.

In 2010, Green helped produce the first draft sequence of a Neandertha­l genome. Four years later, geneticist Joshua Akey co-wrote a paper showing that modern humans carry some remnants of Neandertha­l DNA.

Since then, scientists have continued to refine techniques to extract and analyze genetic material from fossils.

“Better tools allow us to ask increasing­ly more detailed questions about human history and evolution,” said Akey, who is now at Princeton and was not involved in the new research. He praised the methodolog­y of the new study.

However, Alan Templeton, a population geneticist at Washington University in St. Louis, questioned the authors’ assumption that changes in the human genome are randomly distribute­d, rather than clustered around certain hot spots within the genome.

The findings underscore “that we’re actually a very young species,” Akey said. “Not that long ago, we shared the planet with other human lineages.”

 ?? Frank Franklin II Associated Press ?? A RECONSTRUC­TED Neandertha­l skeleton, right, and a modern human skeleton on display at the Museum of Natural History in New York.
Frank Franklin II Associated Press A RECONSTRUC­TED Neandertha­l skeleton, right, and a modern human skeleton on display at the Museum of Natural History in New York.

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