Current:Home > InvestAncient human DNA hints at why multiple sclerosis affects so many northern Europeans today -FundCenter
Ancient human DNA hints at why multiple sclerosis affects so many northern Europeans today
View
Date:2025-04-19 12:44:02
WASHINGTON (AP) — Ancient DNA helps explain why northern Europeans have a higher risk of multiple sclerosis than other ancestries: It’s a genetic legacy of horseback-riding cattle herders who swept into the region about 5,000 years ago.
The findings come from a huge project to compare modern DNA with that culled from ancient humans’ teeth and bones — allowing scientists to trace both prehistoric migration and disease-linked genes that tagged along.
When a Bronze Age people called the Yamnaya moved from the steppes of what are now Ukraine and Russia into northwestern Europe, they carried gene variants that today are known to increase people’s risk of multiple sclerosis, researchers reported Wednesday.
Yet the Yamnaya flourished, widely spreading those variants. Those genes probably also protected the nomadic herders from infections carried by their cattle and sheep, concluded the research published in the journal Nature.
“What we found surprised everyone,” said study co-author William Barrie, a genetics researcher at the University of Cambridge. “These variants were giving these people an advantage of some kind.”
It’s one of several findings from a first-of-its-kind gene bank with thousands of samples from early humans in Europe and western Asia, a project headed by Eske Willerslev of Cambridge and the University of Copenhagen who helped pioneer the study of ancient DNA. Similar research has traced even earlier cousins of humans such as Neanderthals.
Using the new gene bank to explore MS was a logical first step. That’s because while MS can strike any population, it is most common among white descendants of northern Europeans and scientists have been unable to explain why.
The potentially disabling disease occurs when immune system cells mistakenly attack the protective coating on nerve fibers, gradually eroding them. It causes varying symptoms — numbness and tingling in one person, impaired walking and vision loss in another — that often wax and wane.
It’s not clear what causes MS although a leading theory is that certain infections could trigger it in people who are genetically susceptible. More than 230 genetic variants have been found that can increase someone’s risk.
The researchers first examined DNA from about 1,600 ancient Eurasians, mapping some major shifts in northern Europe’s population. First, farmers from the Middle East began supplanting hunter-gatherers and then, nearly 5,000 years ago, the Yamnaya began moving in — traveling with horses and wagons as they herded cattle and sheep.
The research team compared the ancient DNA to about 400,000 present-day people stored in a UK gene bank, to see the MS-linked genetic variations persist in the north, the direction the Yamnaya moved, rather than in southern Europe.
In what is now Denmark, the Yamnaya rapidly replaced ancient farmers, making them the closest ancestors of modern Danes, Willerslev said. MS rates are particularly high in Scandinavian countries.
Why would gene variants presumed to have strengthened ancient immunity later play a role in an autoimmune disease? Differences in how modern humans are exposed to animal germs may play a role, knocking the immune system out of balance, said study co-author Dr. Astrid Iversen of Oxford University.
The findings finally offer an explanation for the north-south MS divide in Europe but more work is needed to confirm the link, cautioned genetic expert Samira Asgari of New York’s Mount Sinai School of Medicine, who wasn’t involved with the research, in an accompanying commentary.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (38116)
Related
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Vanna White extends 'Wheel of Fortune' contract through 2025-26 season
- Nicole Kidman, John Lithgow auction off Zooms, artwork to aid crew members amid Hollywood strikes
- Comedian Gary Gulman hopes new memoir will bring readers 'laughter and nostalgia'
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Climate change made storm that devastated Libya far more likely and intense, scientists say
- Thai king’s estranged son urges open discussion of monarchy, in rejection of anti-defamation law
- Rihanna and A$AP Rocky share first photos of their newborn baby, Riot Rose
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Mbappé and Hakimi score as PSG wins 2-0 against Dortmund in Champions League
Ranking
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Wonder where Hollywood's strikes are headed? Movies might offer a clue
- Instacart’s IPO surges as the grocery delivery company goes from the supermarket to the stock market
- Taco Bell employee accused of using customer credit cards to make fraudulent purchases
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Hawaii governor calls on people to visit West Maui when it reopens in October: Helping our people heal
- Left behind and grieving, survivors of Libya floods call for accountability
- Officer’s bail revoked in shooting death of driver after prosecutors lodge constitutional challenge
Recommendation
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Mexican railway operator halts trains because so many migrants are climbing aboard and getting hurt
Paying for X? Elon Musk considers charging all users a monthly fee to combat 'armies of bots'
What to know about the search for Sergio Brown: Ex-NFL player missing, mother found dead
Average rate on 30
The alchemy of Carlos Santana
Azerbaijan and Armenia fight for 2nd day over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh
Mental health among Afghan women deteriorating across the country, UN report finds