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Svante Pääbo: Genome Shows No Link Between Neandertals and Modern European Populations
CHICAGO--The details are in the DNA: Neandertals probably did not contribute to the gene pool of modern humans.
Watch a video of Svante Paabo's 15 February plenary address to the 2009 AAAS Annual Meeting.
See a PDF of his slide presentation.
The rough draft, first announced at a news conference
on 12 February in Chicago, is a technological feat in ancient DNA
studies. The Neandertal fossil fragments yielding the draft's genetic
material are tens of thousands of years old, surviving in severely
degraded tissue and surrounded by bacteria that may provide their own
confounding genetic signals.
As with most ancient remains, "what you inevitably find is DNA degraded into short little pieces," said Pääbo, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. Faced with this fragmentation, his team of researchers undertook a three-year effort to squeeze the maximum amount of useful Neandertal DNA s out of the fossils obtained from four different sites across Europe.
Svante Pääbo
As with most ancient remains, "what you inevitably find is DNA degraded into short little pieces," said Pääbo, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. Faced with this fragmentation, his team of researchers undertook a three-year effort to squeeze the maximum amount of useful Neandertal DNA s out of the fossils obtained from four different sites across Europe.
Several upgrades in DNA sequencing technology
were a big help, but the researchers also found new ways to guard
against contamination of the Neandertal DNA sample by modern human DNA.
Fossils
were excavated by workers wearing sterile clothing and masks, samples
were handled under clean room conditions, and known Neandertal gene
sequences were tagged with a special genetic marker, among other
"safety" measures, said Pääbo.
After sequencing 63 percent of
the Neandertal genome, the researchers are ready to tackle one of the
most persistent mysteries in human evolution. Were Neandertals kissing
cousins of modern humans? Put more directly: Did they mate, and did
Neandertal genes make their way into the modern human genome?
One
way to approach the problem is to compare the Neandertal genome with
genomes from modern European, African, and Asian modern humans. If
Neandertals mated with modern humans in Europe, as some
paleoanthropologists have suggested, the Neandertal DNA should be more
closely similar to the genome of today's European population than to
the African or Asian genome.
But instead, Pääbo and his
colleagues found that the Neandertal genome was equally different from
the Asian, African, and European genetic branches of the human family
tree.
The researchers can now compare individual genes between
modern humans and Neandertals, looking for DNA variations or
fingerprints of natural selection processes that have occurred since we
diverged genetically from our closest evolutionary relatives.

