Ancient DNA reveals pervasive directional selection across West Eurasia [pdf] (reich.hms.harvard.edu)

by Metacelsus 70 comments 73 points
Read article View on HN

70 comments

[−] rossdavidh 29d ago
One of the authors of this paper, David Reich, has written a book called "Who We Are and How We Got Here", which is worth reading. My thoughts on it: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2605841954
[−] e40 28d ago
Create an account to read? No thanks.
[−] rossdavidh 27d ago
Sorry, didn't know/remember that a GR account was required just to read...
[−] falaki 29d ago
Absolutely worth reading.
[−] vintermann 29d ago
The dataset excites me more than the fairly vague conclusion that some SNPs possibly linked to traits were selected for (or hitched along to genes which were selected for). Genetic archaeology is just so much more exciting than this.

But I bet there will be a ton more of that too, thanks to the high quality dataset.

[−] timmg 29d ago

> the fairly vague conclusion that some SNPs possibly linked to traits were selected for

Interesting. I find that part of the paper the most exciting. We always knew selection would happen for valuable traits. But seeing demonstrations of it in the timelines we have is pretty important.

[−] asdff 28d ago
Makes you wonder what is being selected for currently.
[−] Metacelsus 29d ago
See also the press release: https://hms.harvard.edu/news/massive-ancient-dna-study-revea...

This study covers about 10,000 years of recent human evolution in Europe and West Asia.

From the abstract:

>in the past ten millennia, we find that many hundreds of alleles have been affected by strong directional selection. We also document one-standard-deviation changes on the scale of modern variation in combinations of alleles that today predict complex traits. This includes decreases in predicted body fat and schizophrenia, and increases in measures of cognitive performance. These effects were measured in industrialized societies, and it remains unclear how these relate to phenotypes that were adaptive in the past. We estimate selection coefficients at 9.7 million variants, enabling study of how Darwinian forces couple to allelic effects and shape the genetic architecture of complex traits.

[−] bcjdjsndon 29d ago
How did they decide what made a trait adaptive?
[−] MarkusQ 29d ago
The didn't decide, they observed; consistent directional pressure over thousands of years is strong evidence that an allele is being selected for.
[−] bonsai_spool 29d ago
Here's the paper - we ideally shouldn't be linking to PDFs of these things but it's paywalled https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10358-1
[−] shadowtree 29d ago
Blank Slate hypothesis is now officially refuted, correct?

Different evolutionary paths between races/regions, with impact on mental health and cognitive performance.

[−] damnitbuilds 29d ago
I always knew I was smarter than my parents.