By Dai Cooper, via my grad student listserv.

A Bastion of Sanity in the Land of Oz
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Svante Pääbo’s group at the Max Plank Institute have a paper coming out in the February issue of Cell Biology. In it, they describe sequencing a complete early human mitochondrial genome from the Markina Gora specimen from the Kostenki 14 site in Russia. The remains date to around 30,000 years ago, not the oldest human sequence, but interesting nonetheless because the authors have identified new ways to determine if ancient DNA sequences are genuine vs. contamination. This is especially important for more anatomically modern human fossils, who may have similar sequences to extant populations.
For Neandertal mtDNA, identifying contamination is relatively simple, because their mtDNA sequences fall outside the range of variation found in modern humans. Not so for more recent fossils. So how can researchers identify true archaic sequences?
fragment length, deamination-induced sequence errors at ends of molecules, and purine-associated fragmentation represent features by which endogenous and contaminating populations of DNA molecules can be distinguished in at least some late Pleistocene specimens (1).
So, fragments sequenced from ancient samples are typically shorter than modern contaminants. In many cases, the fragments are shorter than what can be amplified using PCR, meaning high-throughput direct sequencing methods are required to analyze these ancient samples. In addition, the cytosine bases at the 5′ ends of ancient DNA fragments are susceptible to deamination (removal of an -NH3 group), causing those bases to be misread as thymine. The 3′ ends of ancient sequences have a commensurate increase in G-A errors. Finally, fragmentation of ancient sequences occurs more frequently at purine bases (guanine and adenine).
With these criteria in mind, the researchers determined that the Markina Gora sequence belongs to mitochondrial haplogroup U2, a haplogroup still present in Europe today.
The authors determine that it is unlikely that this sequence is the result of modern contamination, because the nucleotide difference between the Markina Gora specimen and the ancestral U sequence is much shorter than than seen between the root and modern sequences, which have accumulated many more mutations over time. Their results also support the hypothesis of pre-agricultural genetic continuity in Europe, so that genetic lineages which were present on the continent prior to the Neolithic transition can still be found in modern European populations.
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Krause J, Briggs AW, Kircher M, Maricic T, Zwyns N, Derevianko A, & Pääbo S (2009). A Complete mtDNA Genome of an Early Modern Human from Kostenki, Russia. Current biology : CB PMID: 20045327
Holly Dunsworth, a physical anthropologist at Penn State, wrote an essay for NPR’s This I Believe project titled I Am Evolution. You can read it, or listen to Holly read it, from NPR’s site. Holly says, in part:
If our beliefs are important enough, we live our lives in service to them. That’s how I feel about evolution. My role as a female Homo sapiens is to return each summer to Kenya, dig up fossils, and piece together our evolutionary history. Scanning the ground for weeks, hoping to find a single molar, or gouging out the side of a hill, one bucket of dirt at a time, I’m always in search of answers to questions shared by the whole human species. The experience deepens my understanding not just about what drives my life, but all our lives, where we came from.
That’s why I’m an anthropologist, and I would imagine most of my labmates feel the same way.

PLoS ONE has a article this month titled The Phylogeny of the Four Pan-American mtDNA Haplogroups: Implications for Evolutionary and Disease Studies. There are several points of interest:
Their results suggest that human expansion into the Americas coincided with the decline of the Last Glacial Maximum (Ice Age), knocking another hole in the “Clovis-first” hypothesis. Given that all four lineages give similar coalescent times, this study may also contribute to the “waves of migration” debate.
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Achilli A, Perego UA, Bravi CM, Coble MD, Kong QP, Woodward SR, Salas A, Torroni A, & Bandelt HJ (2008). The phylogeny of the four pan-American MtDNA haplogroups: implications for evolutionary and disease studies. PloS one, 3 (3) PMID: 18335039
Just a couple of quick items that popped up this week. First, from Ironic Sans, scientist themed Valentine’s cards. The Darwin one is my personal favorite.

And from the “Love in the Animal Kingdom” files, researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology published the first documented proof that wild gorillas, like humans and bonobos, occasionally mate face-to-face.

This suggests that gorillas might use sex, not just for reproduction, but also to reinforce social bonds. An interesting sidenote, the female, Leah, is the same female that was documented using tools.
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Image credit: ©Thomas Breuer – WCS/MPI-EVA