An evolution revolution has begun after scientists extracted genetic information from a 1.7 million-year-old rhino tooth 鈥 the largest and oldest genetic data to ever be recorded.

This new analysis of ancient proteins from dental enamel will start an exciting new chapter in the study of molecular evolution.

Enrico Cappellini

Researchers identified an almost complete set of proteins, a听proteome, in the dental enamel of the rhino and the genetic information discovered is one million years older than the oldest DNA sequenced from a 700,000-year-old horse.

The听by scientists from the 探花直播 of Copenhagen and St John鈥檚 College, 探花直播 of Cambridge, are published in Nature. They mark a breakthrough in the field of ancient听biomolecular听studies and could solve some of the biggest mysteries of animal and human biology by allowing scientists to accurately reconstruct evolution from further back in time than ever before.

Professor Enrico听Cappellini, a specialist in听Palaeoproteomics听at the Globe Institute, 探花直播 of Copenhagen, and first author on the paper, said: 鈥淔or 20 years ancient DNA has been used to address questions about the evolution of extinct species, adaptation and human migration but it has limitations. Now for the first time we have retrieved ancient genetic information which allows us to reconstruct molecular evolution way beyond the usual time limit of DNA preservation.

DNA data that genetically tracks human evolution only covers the last 400,000 years. But the lineages that led to modern humans and to the chimp 鈥 the living species genetically closest to humans 鈥 branched apart around six to seven million years ago which means scientists currently have no genetic information for more than 90 per cent of the evolutionary path that led to modern humans.

Scientists also don鈥檛 know what the genetic links are between us and extinct species such as Homo听erectus听鈥 the oldest known species of human to have had modern human-like body proportions 鈥 because everything that is currently known is almost exclusively based on anatomical information, not genetic information.

Researchers have now used ancient protein sequencing 鈥 based on ground-breaking technology called mass spectrometry 鈥 to retrieve genetic information from the tooth of a 1.77 million year old听Stephanorhinus听鈥 an extinct rhinoceros which lived in Eurasia during the Pleistocene. Researchers took samples of dental enamel from the ancient fossil which was discovered in听Dmanisi, Georgia, and used mass spectrometry to sequence the ancient protein and retrieved genetic information previously unobtainable using DNA testing.听
Tooth enamel is the hardest material present in mammals. In this study researchers discovered the set of proteins it contains lasts longer than DNA and is more genetically informative than collagen, the only other protein so far retrieved from fossils older than one million years.

Professor听Jesper听V. Olsen, head of the Mass Spectrometry for Quantitative听Proteomics听Group at the Novo听Nordisk听Foundation Center for Protein Research, 探花直播 of Copenhagen, and co-corresponding author on the paper, said: 鈥淢ass spectrometry-based protein sequencing will enable us to retrieve reliable and rich genetic information from mammal fossils that are millions of years old, rather than just thousands of years old. It is the only technology able to provide the robustness and accuracy needed to sequence tiny amounts of protein this old.鈥

Professor听Cappellini听added: 鈥淒ental enamel is extremely abundant and it is incredibly durable, which is why a high proportion of fossil records are teeth.

鈥淲e have been able to find a way to retrieve genetic information that is more informative and older than any other source before, and it鈥檚 from a source that is abundant in the fossil records so the potential of the application of this approach is extensive.鈥

Lead author Professor听Eske听Willerslev, who holds positions at St John鈥檚 College, 探花直播 of Cambridge, and is director of The听Lundbeck听Foundation Centre for听GeoGenetics, Globe Institute, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, at the 探花直播 of Copenhagen, said: 鈥淭his research is a game-changer that opens up a lot of options for further evolutionary study in terms of humans as well as mammals. It will听revolutionise听the methods of investigating evolution based on molecular markers and it will open a complete new field of ancient听biomolecular听studies.鈥

This rearranging of the evolutionary lineage of a single species may seem like a small adjustment but identifying changes in numerous extinct mammals and humans could lead to massive shifts in our understanding of the way the world has evolved.

探花直播team of scientists is already implementing the findings in their current research. 探花直播discovery could enable scientists across the globe to collect the genetic data of ancient fossils and to build a bigger, more accurate picture of the evolution of hundreds of species including our own.

Reference:听
Enrico听Cappellini听et al.听Nature (2019).听DOI:听鈥10.1038/s41586-019-1555-y

Originally published by St John's College, Cambridge



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