A study of hundreds of new genomes from across the globe has yielded insights into modern human genetic diversity and ancient population dynamics, including compelling evidence that essentially all
The multinational research effort, led by Harvard Medical School geneticists and published Sept. 21 in Nature, also suggests that no single genetic change or small group of changes is likely to explain the substantial transformations in human culture and cognition seen in the last 50,000 years.
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The study represents the largest data set yet of
Most
«As humans, we are not just the people who live in industrialized countries, and we are not just the people who live in numerically large groups," said David Reich, professor of genetics at HMS and senior author of the study. «If we want to understand who we really are, we have to realize that some of the most interesting aspects of human variation are only present in underrepresented, small populations.»
«We wanted to go out into the world and pull together as many of the ethnically, linguistically and anthropologically diverse samples as we possibly could," said Swapan Mallick, bioinformatic systems director in the Reich lab and first author of the study.
The team’s analyses are already answering questions about various populations’ genetic origins, but, the researchers note, these insights are only a milestone on a longer journey.
«Of course, there are thousands of ethnically distinct populations in the world, and much more work needs to be done," said Mallick.
Clarifying history
Reich, Mallick and their international team of colleagues began by selecting two genomes each from 51 populations represented in a collection called the Human Genome Diversity Project. Next, they assembled samples from members of 91 other groups, including diverse Native American, South Asian and African populations not previously included in
A key
Together, the three studies put to rest a lingering question about whether indigenous peoples of Australia, New Guinea and the Andaman Islands descend in large part from a second group that left Africa earlier and skirted the coast of the Indian Ocean. They do not, the HMS researchers say.
«Our best estimate for the proportion of ancestry from an
The
«It had been unclear whether the group that expanded out of Africa represented a large subset of the populations within Africa," said Mallick. «This really shows that there was a lot of substructure prior to the expansion.»
The additional discovery that genetics alone can’t account for the acceleration of cultural, economic and intellectual progress in the last 50,000 years runs contrary to a popular hypothesis in the field.
«There does not seem to have been one or a few enabling mutations that suddenly appeared among our ancestors and allowed them to think in profoundly different ways," said Reich.
Instead, the researchers say, a constellation of factors, including environment, lifestyle and possibly genetics, likely drove the great changes that occurred.
«Geneticists often search for examples where genetics is the explanation. Here, paradoxically, genetic data are showing that there will be no clear genetic answers," Reich said.
Overcoming hurdles
Mallick and colleagues overcame significant logistical hurdles posed by sharing and processing an enormous amount of data.
Often, in studies of this size, data are collected in many laboratories that use different sequencing machines and different experimental protocols. This can create
The team made much of the data set publicly available in 2014; multiple research groups have already used it for their studies.
In a way, the authors say, the findings reported thus far are just the tip of the iceberg.
«It’s impossible for our group to analyze even a tiny fraction of what the data represents," said Mallick. «Our goal is to push the data out and let people use it to consider their own questions.»
«A project of this magnitude is a combination of considerable efforts from multiple groups and creates an important resource for researchers worldwide," Mallick added. «Such work is only possible in the environment and with the remarkable support from administration and computing groups here at HMS.»
Source: https://hms.harvard.edu/news/diversity-genomes