Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Million-year-old DNA rewrites the mammoth family tree

- By Katherine Kornei

Imagine an elephant, but significan­tly taller and heavier and with longer tusks. That’s the Columbian mammoth, an imposing animal that roamed much of North America during the mostrecent ice age.

When it comes to the mammoth family tree, it has long been believed that the Columbian mammoth evolved earlier than the smaller, shaggier woolly mammoth. But now, using DNA that is more than 1 million years old — the oldest ever recovered from a fossil — researcher­s have turned that assumption on its head: They found that the Columbian mammoth is in fact a hybrid of the woolly mammoth and a previously unrecogniz­ed mammoth lineage.

These results were publishedW­ednesday in the journalNat­ure.

Mammothsar­e depicted in manycave paintings, a reflection of their importance as a source of food, skin and bone during the Pleistocen­e epoch. During the last ice age, humans living in what is today the United States would have primarily encountere­d the Columbian mammoth, said Love Dalen, a paleogenet­icist at the Centre for Palaeogene­ticsin Stockholm.

“It’s an iconic species of the last ice age,” he said.

Fossilized remains of mammoths, particular­ly those preserved in exquisite detail, can shed light on how these animals lived and died. But analyzing an ancient creature’s genetic code — by recovering its DNA and reassembli­ng it into a genome — opens up vast new research possibilit­ies, said David Diezdel-Molino, another paleogenet­icist at the Centre for Palaeogene­tics. “You can track the origin of species.”

A team of researcher­s, including Mr. Dalen and Mr. Diez-del-Molino, recently set out to do just that using three mammoth molars unearthed innortheas­tern Siberia.

These teeth are old — about 700,000 years, 1.1 million years and 1.2 million years — and they’re also impressive to look at, Mr. Dalen said. “They’re the size of a cartonof milk.”

The researcher­s started by extracting a bit of material from the interior of each tooth with a small dentist’s drill. They then used chemicals and enzymes, followed by a washing protocol, to isolate the DNA in the resulting toothpowde­r.

Most of the DNA they extracted consisted of sequences just a few tens of base pairs long. That is to be expected because the passage of time is tough on DNA molecules. Bacteria and enzymes chop up DNA after an organism dies, and water and cosmic rays continue the degradatio­n process even after a sample is buried in permafrost.

Strands that start out millions of base pairs long soon degrade, said Patricia Pecnerova, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of Copenhagen and a researcher on the team. “The DNA is very fragmented,” she said.

But before everything can beput back together digitally, it’s necessary to decontamin­ate each sample, said Tom van der Valk, another team member and a bioinforma­tician at the Science for Life Laboratory in Stockholm. That’s because DNA from plants, bacteria and humans is wildly adept at sneaking into fossils, he said. “A large fraction of our data doesn’t comefrom the mammoth.”

To weed out interlopin­g DNA, the team compared the sequences with genetic code from an African elephant, a close relative of mammoths. They discarded anything that didn’t match. Furthermor­e, they threw out sequences that matched the humangenom­e.

After removing the nonmammoth DNA, the team was left with between 49 million and 3.7 billion base pairs in each of their three samples. (The mammoth genome is roughly 3.2 billion base pairs, which is slightly larger than the human genome.) The researcher­s compared their data with African elephant DNA a second time, which allowed them to put all their DNA fragments in the correct order.

This mammoth DNA smashes the record for the oldest DNA ever sequenced, which was previously held by a roughly 700,000-year-old horse specimen, said Morten Allentoft, an evolutiona­ry biologist at Curtin University in Perth, Australia, who was not involved in the research. “It’s the oldest DNA that’s ever been authentica­lly identified,” he said.

When the researcher­s looked at the three genomes theyre constructe­d, the oldest stood out. “The genome looked weird,” Mr. Dalen said. “I think it’s likely this is a different species.”

That was a shock: Researcher­s have long believed that there was only a single lineageof mammoths in Siberia that gave rise to woolly and Columbian mammoths. This discovery suggests that a previously undiscover­ed mammoth lineage existed as well.

“It’s a huge surprise,” Mr. Dalen said. “It’s completely unexpected from the paleontolo­gy that there would be a secondline­age.”

The team next compared the three genomes with the genetics of the Columbian mammoth, which ambled across much of North America as recently as 12,000 years ago. The goal was to determine how, if at all, these two specieswer­e related.

Theyfound persuasive evidence that the woolly mammoth and this new, unknown lineage crossbred to form the Columbian mammoth, a hybrid species.

No one knows where and for how long this new mammoth lineage thrived, Mr. van der Valk said. “It’d be absolutely amazing if we could get a few more samples of this lineage.”

There’s also the possibilit­y of reconstruc­ting older and older DNA, Mr. Dalen said. Theywon’t re-create Jurassic Park, he said, but theoretica­l models suggest that DNA might survive for up to a few million years. “I don’t think we’re at the limit yet.”

 ?? Gleb Danilov via The New York Times ?? Love Dalen, left, a paleogenet­icist at the Centre for Palaeogene­tics in Stockholm, and Patricia Penerova, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of Copenhagen, hold up a mammoth tusk on Wrangel Island, near Siberia. Genomic data — the oldest ever recovered from a fossil — reveals the origin and evolution of the Columbian mammoth.
Gleb Danilov via The New York Times Love Dalen, left, a paleogenet­icist at the Centre for Palaeogene­tics in Stockholm, and Patricia Penerova, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of Copenhagen, hold up a mammoth tusk on Wrangel Island, near Siberia. Genomic data — the oldest ever recovered from a fossil — reveals the origin and evolution of the Columbian mammoth.

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