Article Synopsis

  • Lactase persistence (LP), the ability to digest lactose as adults, is a key genetic trait that has seen strong natural selection over the last 10,000 years across different human groups.
  • Researchers studied genetic samples from warriors at a Bronze Age battlefield in northern Germany and other ancient sites, finding low levels of the LP allele (rs4988235-A) indicating that the dramatic increase of this gene in populations did not correlate with migrations from the Pontic-Caspian steppe.
  • The ongoing selection for lactase persistence across Europe for the past 3,000 years suggests a more complex history of dairy consumption and genetics than previously thought.

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Article Abstract

Lactase persistence (LP), the continued expression of lactase into adulthood, is the most strongly selected single gene trait over the last 10,000 years in multiple human populations. It has been posited that the primary allele causing LP among Eurasians, rs4988235-A [1], only rose to appreciable frequencies during the Bronze and Iron Ages [2, 3], long after humans started consuming milk from domesticated animals. This rapid rise has been attributed to an influx of people from the Pontic-Caspian steppe that began around 5,000 years ago [4, 5]. We investigate the spatiotemporal spread of LP through an analysis of 14 warriors from the Tollense Bronze Age battlefield in northern Germany (∼3,200 before present, BP), the oldest large-scale conflict site north of the Alps. Genetic data indicate that these individuals represent a single unstructured Central/Northern European population. We complemented these data with genotypes of 18 individuals from the Bronze Age site Mokrin in Serbia (∼4,100 to ∼3,700 BP) and 37 individuals from Eastern Europe and the Pontic-Caspian Steppe region, predating both Bronze Age sites (∼5,980 to ∼3,980 BP). We infer low LP in all three regions, i.e., in northern Germany and South-eastern and Eastern Europe, suggesting that the surge of rs4988235 in Central and Northern Europe was unlikely caused by Steppe expansions. We estimate a selection coefficient of 0.06 and conclude that the selection was ongoing in various parts of Europe over the last 3,000 years.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2020.08.033DOI Listing

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