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Research Publication

Differential DNA methylation of vocal and facial anatomy genes in modern humans

Gokhman D, Nissim-Rafinia M, Agranat-Tamir L et al.

32132541 PubMed ID
41 Authors
03/04/2020 Published
2 Samples
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GD
Gokhman D
NM
Nissim-Rafinia M
AL
Agranat-Tamir L
HG
Housman G
GR
García-Pérez R
LE
Lizano E
CO
Cheronet O
MS
Mallick S
NM
Nieves-Colón MA
LH
Li H
AS
Alpaslan-Roodenberg S
NM
Novak M
GH
Gu H
OJ
Osinski JM
FM
Ferrando-Bernal M
GP
Gelabert P
LI
Lipende I
MD
Mjungu D
KI
Kondova I
BR
Bontrop R
KO
Kullmer O
WG
Weber G
ST
Shahar T
DM
Dvir-Ginzberg M
FM
Faerman M
QE
Quillen EE
MA
Meissner A
LY
Lahav Y
KL
Kandel L
LM
Liebergall M
PM
Prada ME
VJ
Vidal JM
GR
Gronostajski RM
SA
Stone AC
YB
Yakir B
LC
Lalueza-Fox C
PR
Pinhasi R
RD
Reich D
MT
Marques-Bonet T
ME
Meshorer E
CL
Carmel L
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Changes in potential regulatory elements are thought to be key drivers of phenotypic divergence. However, identifying changes to regulatory elements that underlie human-specific traits has proven very challenging. Here, we use 63 reconstructed and experimentally measured DNA methylation maps of ancient and present-day humans, as well as of six chimpanzees, to detect differentially methylated regions that likely emerged in modern humans after the split from Neanderthals and Denisovans. We show that genes associated with face and vocal tract anatomy went through particularly extensive methylation changes. Specifically, we identify widespread hypermethylation in a network of face- and voice-associated genes (SOX9, ACAN, COL2A1, NFIX and XYLT1). We propose that these repression patterns appeared after the split from Neanderthals and Denisovans, and that they might have played a key role in shaping the modern human face and vocal tract.

Chapter III

Ancient DNA Samples

2 ancient DNA samples referenced in this publication

2 Samples
Sample ID Date/Era Country Locality Sex mtDNA Y-DNA
I1583 6424 BCE Turkey Northwest Anatolia. Marmara. Barcın M K1a2e G-FGC2315
I1583 6424 BCE Turkey Northwest Anatolia. Marmara. Barcın M K1a2e G-FGC2315
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment