Small ears, frizzy hair and dry ear wax - the genetics of mammoths
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[April 10, 2023]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The largest-ever genetic assessment of the woolly
mammoth has yielded new insight into this elephant cousin - an icon of
the Ice Age - including about its fluffy hair, small ears, cold
tolerance, fat storage and even dry ear wax.
Researchers on Friday said they had analyzed the genomes of 23 woolly
mammoths - including 16 newly sequenced ones - based on remains
preserved in Siberian permafrost. They then compared them to the genomes
of 28 modern-day Asian and African elephants.
"The objective was to find those mutations that are present in all
mammoths but not in any of the elephants - that is, the genetic
adaptations exclusive to the woolly mammoth," said evolutionary
geneticist David Díez-del-Molino of the Centre for Palaeogenetics in
Stockholm, lead author of the study published in the journal Current
Biology.
"We find that woolly mammoths had molecular adaptations in genes related
to coping with cold Arctic environments, such as thick fur, fat storage
and metabolism, and thermal sensation, among others," Díez-del-Molino
added.
The genomes included a mammoth from 700,000 years ago - near the
origination time of this species on the Siberian steppes - and others
that lived later in their history, thus showing how genetic adaptations
evolved.
The species, which arose at a time when Earth's climate was cooling,
inhabited parts of northern Eurasia and North America. Most mammoths
went extinct roughly 10,000 years ago amid a warming climate at the last
Ice Age's end, with scientists debating whether human hunting played a
role. The last ones died out on Wrangel Island off Siberia's coast 4,000
years ago.
The first complete mammoth genome was sequenced in 2015, after a partial
genome in 2008.
The new study showed that 92% of unique mutations already existed at the
outset of the species, with continued evolution on certain traits. For
example, mammoths evolved ever-fluffier fur and ever-smaller ears over
time.
"Our 700,000-year-old woolly mammoth may have had larger ears than the
mammoths of the last Ice Age," Centre for Palaeogenetics evolutionary
geneticist and study senior author Love Dalén said.
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A complete mammoth skeleton is displayed
before its auction by Aguttes auction house in Lyon, France,
November 17, 2017. REUTERS/Emmanuel Foudrot/File Photo
One highly evolved gene was one that when "turned off" in laboratory
mice results in unusually small ears. Woolly mammoths were about the
size of modern African elephants, around 13 feet (4 meters) tall,
but had much smaller ears to guard against losing body heat from a
larger ear surface.
Several genes involving fur type and growth differed from modern
elephants. One of them in humans is associated with Uncombable Hair
Syndrome, a condition characterized by dry and frizzy hair that
cannot be combed flat. In mammoths, fluffier hair, as well as fat
deposits, would have helped provide insulation in the cold.
The mammoths had a mutation in a gene that in people is associated
with having dry ear wax, though it is unclear how this gave them any
advantage. The same mutation is associated with reduced body odor in
the armpits in humans, though this may not mean mammoths had a
dainty aroma.
"I very much doubt mammoths would have been sweating into their arm
pits. This is a very unique human thing, I think. Other mammals
regulate their body temperature in other ways. So it is very unclear
if mammoths would have smelled differently because of this gene
variant," Dalén said.
The study helped clarify variable shades of mammoth hair color -
brownish with a touch of red. Mutations in an immune system-related
gene indicated the species adapted to a serious pathogen outbreak at
some point.
While the researchers are not involved in trying to resurrect the
mammoth through cloning, their work could assist any such effort.
"The dataset we present could be seen as the first element of a road
map towards resurrection," Dalén said. "But it should be pointed out
that the road ahead is long, likely to be full of pot holes, and in
the worst-case scenario leads nowhere."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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