Scientists Discover A Girl With DNA From Two Different Species
Modern humans evolved from Homo sapiens, and a small percentage of us have Neanderthal DNA. But did you know that there were more species of ancient humans? A newly-discovered girl had parents from two different species– one Neanderthal, and another one that was recently discovered. This discovery will change our perception of human evolution.
Not Just Homo Sapiens And Neanderthals
Thanks to modern DNA tests, people can see whether they are part Neanderthal. Neanderthals are an extinct subspecies of humans that went extinct 40,000 years ago. Today, only 2% of Eurasians have Neanderthal DNA.
But there are more species of humans that existed thousands of years ago. A few recent discoveries have found a third species of ancient human that might have contributed to our ancestry. But how is that possible, and what happened to them?
The Third Species Of Human, Denisovans
In southern Siberia, Russia, there is a cave near the Altai Mountains called the Denisova Cave. It was named after an 18th-century hermit who lived there. In 2008, archaeologists from the Russian Academy of Sciences unearthed several bone fragments there.
Scientists dated the oldest bones to at least 51,000 years ago. But it was not a Neanderthal or Homo sapien; researchers from the Max Planck Institute announced that it was a new species of human, the Denisovan.
Who Were The Denisovans?
Beyond their DNA sequencing, little is known about the Denisovans. We know that they lived as far back as 217,000 years ago, but few Denisovan bone fragments have been found. Only five viable specimens have been analyzed to date.
But scientists had no idea that a new discovery would come out only a few years later. This ancient human was not just Denisovan; she was an interbred between two different human species, which challenges what we previously knew about human evolution.
Can Human Species Interbreed?
Interbreeding can be confusing. For instance, why do Neanderthals and Homo sapiens successfully interbreed, but mules (a cross between a horse and a donkey) become infertile? The answer lies in DNA.
A horse has 64 chromosomes, and a donkey has 62. When a mule is born, it gets 63 chromosomes– an odd number, which is a “defective” genetic code. DNA needs to latch onto an even amount of chromosomes, 50% of the father’s and 50% of the mother’s.
The Key To Successful Interbreeding: Fertility
Although mules are infertile, plenty of other species can create fertile offspring. For instance, a liger (mix between a tiger and a lion) is fertile. These species are genetically compatible, just as many primates are also compatible.
Knowing this, it makes sense why Neanderthals and Homo sapiens could successfully interbreed. Researchers predicted that Denisovans also interbred with other human species, whether their offspring became fertile or not. However, they never found proof of this hypothesis until 2018.
In 2012, Archaeologists Had No Idea What They Would Find
In 2012, Russian archaeologists were once again examining the Denisova Cave. They uncovered multiple bone fragments, but they could not identify most of them. The archaeologists gathered a collection of 2,000 bone fragments and sent them to a lab.
These bone fragments sat untouched and unresearched for several years. Then, in 2016, a student at the University of Oxford discovered that one of these bone fragments was not like anything scientists had ever seen before.
Not Your Average Two-Centimeter Bone
Samantha Brown, an MSc student at the University of Oxford, was analyzing the 2,000 bone fragments in 2016. She was testing the DNA to determine what type of animal each bone belonged to. But to her surprise, at least one bone, only two centimeters long, ended up being human.
What Did This College Student Discover?
Brown discovered that this human fragment was a unique result of interbreeding. The person was part Neanderthal and part Denisovan. If her results were accurate, then this would be the first evidence of first-generation breeding between two human species.
Brown contacted the head of the department, and then the bone fragments were sent to the the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. This Institute had the technology to closely examine the bone fragment and confirm Brown’s results.
Even Researchers Couldn’t Believe It
Brown was not the only person who was surprised. A team of paleogeneticists, Viviane Slon and Svante Pääbo, conducted a genome analysis of the bones. They isolated each DNA sequence to identify which parent was connected to each species.
To their shock, both researchers confirmed that Brown was right. This bone was indeed the first-ever Denisovan-Neanderthal hybrid discovered. “My first reaction was disbelief,” Slon later admitted. The chances of finding a first-generation interbred human are especially low.
Scientists predicted that Denisovans mated with other ancient humans, but they never expected to find proof this quickly. “We knew from previous studies that Neanderthals and Denisovans must have occasionally had children together,” Slon explained. “But I never thought we would be so lucky as to find an actual offspring of the two groups.”
However, this DNA test was only the tip of the iceberg. Who was this ancient human? And how did these two species end up mating in the first place?
When Slon and Pääbo further examined the bone fragment, they learned more about this ancient human. They knew that this person was a girl, and based on the width of her bones, they estimated that she was around 13 years old.
According to radiocarbon dating, this girl likely died 90,000 years ago. The initial bone that Brown examined was the tip of her finger. The researchers named her Denny, after the cave that she was found in.
To uncover Denny’s parentage, the researchers were able to separate DNA sequences. They determined that the mitochondrial DNA came from a Neanderthal. Mitochondrial DNA comes from the mother, meaning that her mother was a Neanderthal and her father was a Denisovan.
“An interesting aspect of this genome is that it allows us to learn things about two populations– the Neanderthals from the mother’s side, and the Denisovans from the father’s side,” explained geneticist Fabrizio Mafessoni. The next question was how they came together.
However, Scientists Still Couldn’t Believe Their Findings
Despite all of these findings, the research team still needed several people to confirm. “I thought they must have screwed up something,” Pääbo recalled. For a third analysis, they sent the bones to the the Francis Crick Institute in London.
Population geneticist Pontus Skoglund concluded that these findings were correct. “They nail it,” he said. “There seems to be no uncertainty at all.” But why were the scientists so uncertain about these findings? Was it really that shocking?