The secrets of the human genome: researchers uncover clues by studying the genomes of other mammals
Humans have only just scratched the surface when it comes to understanding our genome. The massive new Zoonomia project, however, has revealed the importance of studying the genomes of other mammals, such as bumblebee bats, cheetahs and hippos, in order to better understand our own. By comparing the DNA of 239 mammals, including one human, over 100 scientists have uncovered clues to the more mysterious parts of our genome, such as the regions that control when, where and how much of a certain protein is made. By looking at the common parts of the genome that haven't changed across species, scientists can better understand human disease and even predict the best treatment course for patients. – Nadya Swart
Bats, Cheetahs and Hippos Unlock Mysteries of the Human Genome: Lisa Jarvis
By Lisa Jarvis
Humans like to think we have a monopoly on understanding ourselves — that explanations for all our inner workings, including when things go awry, lie within our genetic code. We might like to think that, but we're wrong. Whether it's the diminutive bumblebee bat, the lightning-fast cheetah or even a lumbering hippo, mammals hold important clues to what makes us tick.
That's the message of a massive data release from a project called Zoonomia, in which some 100 scientists at dozens of institutions spent over a decade collecting, sequencing and analysing the genomes of 239 mammals (and one human thrown in for comparison). The ambitious work makes clear that animals have a lot to teach us about the more mysterious parts of our own genomes.
The initial findings are a welcome reminder that no matter how improbable, all of us have things in common. And maybe it gives us yet another reason to prioritise preserving the earth for every living being.
To be fair, the project isn't only about understanding humans. The 11 papers released in the initial collection, published together in the prestigious journal Science, explore a wide range of topics. Researchers studied, for example, what gave the Alaskan sled dog Balto his speed and endurance; and how an animal's genome can provide clues about its risk of extinction. (There is also an ongoing effort to study the long tooth of a narwhal, which scientists assure me is a real mammal and not just some figment of a child's imagination.)
But back to what it means for humans.
You might wonder why we have so much to learn from mammals. After all, we humans have sequenced millions of our own genomes, the expansive instructions for human development and functioning. Shouldn't that tell us all we need to know?
The problem is we've only just scratched the surface, with the lion's share of our genome still to be deciphered. We now have a pretty good understanding of the regions that encode for proteins, but that accounts for less than 2% of our DNA. It's like being able to read only a few words on a page full of text — we might understand some of them but lack the context and clues to decipher all the rest.
This new collection of mammal genomes can help us home in on some of the more mysterious parts of our DNA — in particular, the regions that orchestrate when, where, and by how much a certain protein should be made. Imagine your cell as a piece of music, with a conductor signalling for the volume to be turned up on certain proteins or gesturing for others to quiet down. Disease brings discord — say, the strings have gotten too loud — and a cell might proliferate out of control or send the wrong signals.
We need animals' genomes to understand that part of our own genome because they have so much more history behind them. Over the last 100 million years, every single letter in their codes of life should have changed many, many times. So when researchers encounter a stretch of letters or even a single letter that's stayed the same, it's like a giant neon arrow pointing to something that is essential for life. They can reasonably assume that those areas are responsible for critical functions, says Kerstin Lindblad-Toh, the scientific director of vertebrate genome biology at the Broad Institute and a leader of the Zoonomia project.
Humans, by comparison, only have about 200,000 years of existence under our belt. That means our genomes have undergone far fewer tweaks, making it much harder to look across a lot of them to decipher which areas might be important.
In other words, our animal friends can put our own genomes into better context.
To be clear, just because researchers have identified those key, common parts of the genome that haven't changed across species (also called "constrained regions") doesn't mean we necessarily know their function. Still, they can be useful for understanding human disease.
That could be especially true in cancer. Oncologists sequence the DNA from a patient's tumour to look for mutations that could be causing cells to grow out of control. But that doesn't always lead to easy answers — sometimes, it just leads to a long list of mutations that may or may not be driving someone's cancer.
Zoonomia's massive mammalian dataset offers a way to significantly narrow down that group, perhaps from 100 to just 10, or even to one, Lindbald-Toh says. "You basically have a blueprint of whether something is important or not," she says.
In one of the 11 Zoonomia papers, Lindbald-Toh and her colleagues used this concept to identify distinct genetic drivers for children versus adults with a type of brain cancer called medulloblastoma. They also showed that those tumours were likely to respond to specific cancer drugs, opening the door to using this new data to predict the best treatment course for patients. Lindbald-Toh now wants to repeat the exercise across many more kinds of tumours.
There are numerous other ways that this project can inform human health and disease and potentially point to new ideas for medicines. The Zoonomia team offered a good example of how quickly the data could be used in the real world during Covid when they were able to assess whether other species might be vulnerable to infection with the virus. Within weeks, their genome crunching showed that many were, with wildlife and endangered species at highest risk.
The strength of what can be learned from the project and what can be learned about own health will only improve as more animals are added to the genomic zoo. Researchers are particularly keen to add more primates. Currently, only 43 are included, but they'd love to add some of the other 200 or so because they've been a particularly powerful guide to the most crucial parts of our genome.
Ideally, the genetic menagerie will eventually be broad enough to allow us to extract even more precise knowledge about ourselves — and thank mammals, of course, for the favour.
© 2023 Bloomberg L.P.
Read Also:
- Breakthrough in Alzheimer's research: examining the pros and cons of two promising new drugs
- Andrew Kenny examines the manipulation of children into believing they were born into the wrong gender
- Cancer, diabetes, ageing: Dr Valter Longo on his pioneered fasting-mimicking diet and its infinite potential