New collaborative research involving two Clemson University scientists has found that some genetic traits modern humans inherited from Neanderthals could increase a person’s susceptibility to autism.
People with autism don’t have more Neanderthal DNA than those who do not — most modern humans have an average of around 2-3% Neanderthal DNA.
Instead, the researchers from Clemson and Loyola University New Orleans discovered that some Neanderthal-derived variations are more common in people with autism than in the general population.
“This is the first evidence that I am aware of actually showing that Neanderthal DNA is associated with autism,” said Alex Feltus, a professor in the Clemson Department of Genetics and Biochemistry.
The study suggests long-term effects of ancient human hybridization on brain organization and function.
Neanderthals emerged in Europe as far back as 400,000 years ago. Modern humans, Homo sapiens, arrived in Europe (from Africa as well) about 54,000 years ago. The two species interbred.
Fourteen years ago, the first whole-genome sequence of the Neanderthal genome was published after scientists extracted DNA from the bones of three female Neanderthals that were discovered in a cave in Croatia.
Associated with human health conditions
Since then, scientists have associated Neanderthal DNA to several human health conditions, including autoimmune diseases, prostate cancer, Type 2 diabetes, skull morphology, depression and protection against schizophrenia.
In this study, the researchers used data from publicly available data bases: Simons Foundation Powering Autism Research (SPARK), which includes autistic individuals and their unaffected siblings; Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) and 1000 Genomes (1000G). They found specific Neanderthal genetic markers were enriched in people with autism compared to ethnically-matched control groups.
The researchers —which included co-author Loyola University New Orleans Assistant Professor Emily Casanova and Rini Pauly, a Ph.D. candidate in the CU-MUSC Biomedical Data Science and Informatics program — found 25 genetic markers linked to brain development that were more common in people with autism.
Not everybody will develop autism
But all people who have these Neanderthal-derived variations will not develop autism, Feltus said.
“The hypothesis is not, ‘Did Neanderthals give us autism?’ It’s that Neanderthals gave us some of the gene tweaks that give a higher susceptibility for autism,” he said.
Feltus continued, “Autism is a complex trait. It is controlled by many, many genes. A big part of what we do in my lab is try to understand the level of complexity. Of the 60,000 genes in the human genome, how many genes are at play when you’re developing autism or cancer or any other complex trait? We embrace complexity. We don’t try to erase complexity.”
Feltus said the research could lead to earlier diagnostics.
Detailed findings were published in the journal Nature: Molecular Psychiatry in an article titled “Enrichment of a subset of Neanderthal polymorphisms in autistic probands and siblings.”
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