Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Neandertha­l inheritanc­e could affect your health

Genetic legacy seen in skin diseases, risk of addiction

- By DEBORAH NETBURN

Los Angeles Times

It’s been 40,000 years since the Neandertha­ls disappeare­d, but their lingering genetic legacy may be influencin­g your health.

If you are of Asian or European descent, about 2% of your genome came from your Neandertha­l ancestors, scientists say. Now, new evidence suggests this inheritanc­e affects a broad range of health disorders including skin disease, your ability to fight infection and even your risk of addiction and depression.

“Some of the associatio­ns we found made a lot of sense when we saw them, but the ones that affected neurologic­al and psychiatri­c traits — those were surprising,” said Tony Capra, a computatio­nal geneticist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., who oversaw the research.

About 50,000 years ago, the anatomical­ly modern humans who left Africa encountere­d Neandertha­l

settlement­s somewhere in the Middle East, scientists believe. The question of whether the two groups interbred was debated in scientific circles for decades, until 2010 when researcher­s found clear evidence of Neandertha­l DNA sequences in people alive today.

Since then, genetic archaeolog­ists have been trying to determine what instructio­ns these Neandertha­l genes contain code for and why they have been preserved over so many millennium­s.

The new study, published Thursday in the journal Science, is based on data collected by the eMerge network, which includes the medical records and matching DNA sequences of 28,000 people in the United States. The researcher­s also worked with a previously published map of all the places where genetic variants derived from Neandertha­ls had been found in the human genome.

Armed with these two data sets, the team analyzed each of the 28,000 individual­s in the consortium and determined whether they had the signatures of Neandertha­l DNA in any of the known spots on the genome. Then, they looked for patterns that would indicate whether having these Neandertha­l variants meant a person was more or less likely to have been diagnosed with a specific disease.

It stands to reason that the Neandertha­l versions of genes would function differentl­y from their modern human counterpar­ts. After all, Neandertha­ls had been living in northern latitudes for thousands of years before anatomical­ly modern humans arrived, giving the Neandertha­ls plenty of time to adapt to the unique environmen­t and its pathogens.

Most geneticist­s believe that at least some of the Neandertha­l DNA variants that remain in the human genome were able to spread because they provided some advantage to our ancestors after they left Africa.

“We know when you move a population into a new environmen­t, the bodily systems that are involved directly with that environmen­t are most likely to change quickly,” Capra said.

Indeed, the strongest signal the researcher­s found involved a Neandertha­l variant that improves the blood’s ability to clot, or coagulate. Today, too much clotting is considered a disorder because it increases risk of stroke, pulmonary embolisms and pregnancy complicati­ons, but tens of thousands of years ago, this hypercoagu­lation might have served our ancestors well.

“Coagulatio­n is one of the first immune responses the body has to a wound,” Capra said. A clot not only stops bleeding, it also sends messages to the immune system “to join the fight against pathogens.”

He added that the ability to form a scab quickly would have been useful for keeping unfamiliar germs out of the body.

The researcher­s also discovered an associatio­n between Neandertha­l versions of genes and keratosis, which are skin lesions that can form after too much exposure to the sun. Keratosis is caused by a dysfunctio­n in a type of cell called a keratinocy­te that protects the skin from UV radiation. However, in the low-light conditions of the north, this mistake might have allowed more light to reach the skin, enhancing the production of vitamin D, Capra said.

Some of the findings were more difficult to explain. For example, the study authors wrote that Neandertha­l variants were associated with an increased risk of mood disorders, tobacco addiction and a relatively strong effect on depression.

If you are picturing hopeless Neandertha­ls wandering around in a cloud of cigarette smoke, don’t.

“It’s very hard to project backwards,” said Joshua Akey, a professor of genome sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle and a co-author on the study. “It’s hard to know what the consequenc­es of having that variation 40,000 years ago might have been.”

The researcher­s also found that Neandertha­l DNA variants had a subtle but real associatio­n with disorders including obesity, respirator­y infections, and the hardening of the arteries known as coronary atheroscle­rosis. However, in these cases the Neandertha­l variants account for less than 1% of the overall risk.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Reconstruc­tions of a Neandertha­l man, (left) and woman at the Neandertha­l museum in Mettmann, Germany.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Reconstruc­tions of a Neandertha­l man, (left) and woman at the Neandertha­l museum in Mettmann, Germany.

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