Scientists decode Neanderthal genes

SuzannePjamSuzannePjam Posts: 411
edited November 2006 in A Moving Train
Scientists decode Neanderthal genes
Material from 38,000-year-old bone fragment being analyzed
By Ker Than
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15732243/

Humans and their close Neanderthal relatives began diverging from a common ancestor about 700,000 years ago, and the two groups split permanently some 300,000 years later, according to two of the most detailed analyses of Neanderthal DNA to date.
Using different techniques, two teams of scientists separately sequenced large chunks of DNA extracted from the femur of a 38,000-year-old Neanderthal specimen found in a cave 26 years ago in Croatia. One team sequenced more than 1 million base pairs of the 3.3-billion-pair genome, and the other analyzed 65,000 pairs.
The achievements could help shed light on the evolution of our own species, and it paves the way for building a complete library of the Neanderthal genome within a few years, the scientists say.

No evidence of interbreeding
In popular imagination, Neanderthals are often portrayed as prehistoric brutes who became outsmarted by a more advanced species, humans, emerging from Africa. But excavations and anatomical studies have shown that Neanderthals used tools, wore jewelry, buried their dead, cared for their sick, and possibly sang or even spoke in much the same way that we do. Even more humbling, perhaps, their brains were slightly larger than ours.
The results from the new studies confirm the Neanderthal's humanity, and show that their genomes and ours are more than 99.5 percent identical, differing by only about 3 million bases.
"This is a drop in the bucket if you consider that the human genome is 3 billion bases," said Edward Rubin of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, who led one of the research teams.
For comparison, the genomes of chimpanzees, our closest living relatives, differ from humans by about 30 million to 50 million base pairs.
The findings also appear to argue against speculations by some scientists that Neanderthals and humans interbred in more recent times. "We see no evidence of mixing 30,000 to 40,000 years ago in Europe," Rubin said. "We don't exclude it, but from the data that we have, we have no evidence that pages were ripped from one genome and put in the other."

Ruling out contamination
One of the biggest challenges in sequencing Neanderthal DNA is finding a bone sample that hasn't been too contaminated by human handling. Fortunately, the femur fragment used in the studies was relatively small and uninteresting, causing it to be largely overlooked.
The femur "was thrown in a big box of uninformative bones and not handled very much," said Svante Paabo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, leader of the other sequencing project. "Whereas more interesting bones — where you can study the muscle attachment and the morphology of Neanderthals — had been extensively cleaned and handled and thus tend to be much more contaminated."
The researchers also relied on other clues, such as chemical damage unique to ancient DNA, to help verify that the genetic material was indeed Neanderthal. "One of the crucial things is that we feel confident that the DNA we have, which we're calling Neanderthal, is truly Neanderthal," Rubin said.
New advances
The successes of the two teams' sequencing projects were made possible by recent advances in DNA sequencing technology, which now allow scientists to sequence DNA more than 100 times faster than in the past.
Paabo's team recovered more than a million Neanderthal base pairs using a new automated technique called "pyrosequencing." In this process, DNA fragments are attached to tiny artificial beads, sequenced, and then matched to similar sections on human chromosomes.
Rubin's team employed "metagenomics," which involves integrating short fragments of extracted Neanderthal DNA into the genomes of bacteria. The Neanderthal DNA gets amplified as the bacteria divide, and then scientists pluck out human-matching bases using "probes" made with snippets of human DNA.
The researchers say their achievements mark the "dawn of Neanderthal genomics," and they estimate that further advances in DNA sequencing technology could allow the completion of a very rough draft of the entire Neanderthal genome within two years.
"There's no question that we're going to have a Neanderthal genome, and likely, we're going to have several Neanderthal genomes," Rubin said. The team hopes to extract and sequence DNA from the bones of other individuals and to complete several drafts of the Neanderthal genome.
Clues to our past
A complete Neanderthal genome would help scientists identify the genetic changes in our own genome that set us apart from other hominids.
The comparison between recently sequenced chimpanzee genomes and ours is already shedding light on the evolutionary changes our ancestors went through to make them less ape-like. But because chimps and humans began diverging some 6.5 million years ago, examination of their genome cannot reveal what happened in the final stretches of our own evolution.

"Humans went through several stages of evolution in the last 400,000 years," said study co-author Jonathan Pritchard of the University of Chicago. "If we can compare humans’ and Neanderthals’ genomes, then we can possibly identify what the key genetic changes were during that final stage of human evolution."
A completed genome will also reveal new insights about Neanderthals, who disappeared mysteriously about 30,000 years ago.
"In having the Neanderthal genome sequence ...we're going to learn about the biology, learn about things that we could never learn from the bones and the artifacts that we have," Rubin said.
The results of Rubin's team are detailed in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature; Paabo's team's results are detailed in Friday's issue of the journal Science.
© 2006 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.
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Comments

  • Fascinating. Thank you.
  • gue_bariumgue_barium Posts: 5,515
    Contrary to the report, I suspect inbreeding.
    Nothing like a woman with a bigger brain to get the party started.

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    except by express written permission of ©gue_barium, the author.
  • kenny olavkenny olav Posts: 3,319
    One of my favorite topics.

    I recently read (I'm afraid I don't remember where) that Neanderthals and modern humans were not genetically similar enough to interbreed. They certainly were capable of having sex with each other, and it is very probable that they did, but no child could be produced as a result.
  • gue_bariumgue_barium Posts: 5,515
    Kenny Olav wrote:
    One of my favorite topics.

    I recently read (I'm afraid I don't remember where) that Neanderthals and modern humans were not genetically similar enough to interbreed. They certainly were capable of having sex with each other, and it is very probable that they did, but no child could be produced as a result.
    Ughhoo moo shoom agalooma

    all posts by ©gue_barium are protected under US copyright law and are not to be reproduced, exchanged or sold
    except by express written permission of ©gue_barium, the author.
  • Maybe they can make a Caveman like Jurrasic park.

    That would be cool.

    "I'll have the roast duck, with the mango salsa"
  • gue_bariumgue_barium Posts: 5,515
    Smellyman wrote:
    Maybe they can make a Caveman like Jurrasic park.

    That would be cool.

    "I'll have the roast duck, with the mango salsa"

    I think that would be cool.

    I'll bet one of the females would look like________.

    What's her name?

    You know who I mean.

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    except by express written permission of ©gue_barium, the author.
  • gue_bariumgue_barium Posts: 5,515
    Kenny Olav wrote:
    One of my favorite topics.

    I recently read (I'm afraid I don't remember where) that Neanderthals and modern humans were not genetically similar enough to interbreed. They certainly were capable of having sex with each other, and it is very probable that they did, but no child could be produced as a result.

    Da da?

    all posts by ©gue_barium are protected under US copyright law and are not to be reproduced, exchanged or sold
    except by express written permission of ©gue_barium, the author.
  • CollinCollin Posts: 4,931
    Thank you, very interesting.
    THANK YOU, LOSTDAWG!


    naděje umírá poslední
  • miller8966miller8966 Posts: 1,450
    Kenny Olav wrote:
    One of my favorite topics.

    I recently read (I'm afraid I don't remember where) that Neanderthals and modern humans were not genetically similar enough to interbreed. They certainly were capable of having sex with each other, and it is very probable that they did, but no child could be produced as a result.

    they did..the creatures name is Nancy Pelosi.
    America...the greatest Country in the world.
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