Diabetes risk gene ‘from Neanderthals’
28 Dec BBC
A gene variant that seems to increase the risk of diabetes in Latin
Americans appears to have been inherited from Neanderthals, a study
suggests.
We now know that modern humans interbred with a population of
Neanderthals shortly after leaving Africa 60,000-70,000 years ago. This
means that Neanderthal genes are now scattered across the genomes of all
non-Africans living today.Details of the study appear in the journal
Nature.The gene variant was detected in a large genome-wide association
study (GWAS) of more than 8,000 Mexicans and other Latin Americans. The
GWAS approach looks at many genes in different individuals, to see
whether they are linked with a particular trait.
People who carry the higher risk version of the gene are 25% more
likely to have diabetes than those who do not, and people who inherited
copies from both parents are 50% more likely to have diabetes.The higher
risk form of the gene - named SLC16A11 - has been found in up to half of
people with recent Native American ancestry, including Latin
Americans.The variant is found in about 20% of East Asians and is rare
in populations from Europe and Africa.
The elevated frequency of this variant in Latin Americans could
account for as much as 20% of these populations’ increased prevalence of
type 2 diabetes - the origins of which are complex and poorly
understood.
“To date, genetic studies have largely used samples from people of
European or Asian ancestry, which makes it possible to miss culprit
genes that are altered at different frequencies in other populations,”
said co-author Jose Florez, associate professor of medicine at Harvard
Medical School in Massachusetts.
By expanding our search to include samples from Mexico and Latin
America, we've found one of the strongest genetic risk factors
discovered to date, which could illuminate new pathways to target with
drugs and a deeper understanding of the disease.”
The team that discovered the variant carried out additional analyses,
in collaboration with Svante Paabo of the Max Planck Institute for
Evolutionary Anthropology.
They discovered that the SLC16A11 sequence associated with risk of
type 2 diabetes is found in a newly sequenced Neanderthal genome from
Denisova Cave in Siberia. |