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West Eurasia

All articles tagged with #west eurasia

Ancient Genome Tracks Rapid Turn in Human Evolution
science26 days ago

Ancient Genome Tracks Rapid Turn in Human Evolution

A massive ancient-DNA study analyzing data from more than 10,000 ancient individuals, plus thousands of published and modern genomes, finds that directional natural selection was more active and occurred more recently than previously believed. The analysis identifies 479 gene variants that rose or fell in West Eurasia over the last 10,000 years, with selection intensifying after farming. Although such selection explains only about 2% of genetic changes, many variants tie to traits seen today—like light skin, immune responses, and disease risks—and some gene groups influenced polygenic traits. Caution is urged in linking ancient variants to modern traits, and results are not limited to West Eurasia. The researchers have made data and methods public to extend work to other populations and time periods, with implications for health, disease understanding, and potential gene-therapy considerations.

Ancient DNA uncovers ongoing human evolution: lighter skin, red hair, and reduced baldness in West Eurasia
science1 month ago

Ancient DNA uncovers ongoing human evolution: lighter skin, red hair, and reduced baldness in West Eurasia

A Nature study analyzing about 16,000 genomes across 18,000 years in West Eurasia shows natural selection acted on hundreds of gene variants, increasing light skin and red hair, boosting resistance to HIV and leprosy, and reducing susceptibility to male-pattern baldness and rheumatoid arthritis. The team’s AGES method reveals that recent human evolution continued beyond prior assumptions, with trait shifts likely tied to changing environments and pathogens; data and methods are openly shared to enable further research.

Ancient genomes reveal broad directional selection across West Eurasia
science1 month ago

Ancient genomes reveal broad directional selection across West Eurasia

A new method applied to 15,836 West Eurasian ancient genomes (10,016 newly reported) finds hundreds of alleles with consistent frequency changes over the last ~10,000 years, indicating pervasive directional selection rather than just migrations. The study shows polygenic shifts affecting modern trait predictions—lower body fat and schizophrenia risk, higher cognitive performance—measured in industrialized contexts, with selection coefficients estimated across about 9.7 million variants, revealing that selection on complex traits helped shape the genetic architecture of present-day populations.

Ancient DNA reveals selection for light skin, red hair, and immunity in West Eurasians
science1 month ago

Ancient DNA reveals selection for light skin, red hair, and immunity in West Eurasians

A Nature study of 18,000-year genomes from West Eurasians shows natural selection boosted lightweight-skin pigmentation, red hair, and resistance to HIV and leprosy, while lowering the frequency of male-pattern baldness and rheumatoid arthritis risk. Using a new method called AGES, researchers detected fine-scale directional selection over millennia and say patterns likely reflect changing environments and pathogens; the team plans to extend the approach to other regions like East Eurasia.