To get a better grip on his ancestry and predisposition to disease, Albert Zink, head of the Institute for Mummies and the Iceman in Bolzano, and his team sequenced Ötzi’s 3 billion base pair nuclear genome from a shard of hip bone. Their sequence covers more than 90 percent of the Iceman’s genome. Their team also analysed DNA preserved in Ötzi’s stomach in hopes of revealing the microbes that colonized his gut.
Zink says his team is keeping most of the results of these studies under wraps, pending publication. They had hoped to have the paper out in time for last week’s Mummy Congress and a television special called Iceman Murder Mystery.
His team plans to use the sequence to determine Ötzi’s status for genetic variations linked to diseases in modern humans, particularly arthrosclerosis. A full nuclear genome will also paint a more detailed picture of the Iceman’s ancestry and his relationship to present-day humans. Zink’s team will ask whether Ötzi is an ancestor of people living in Central Europe today, or whether he and his kin died out and were replaced by migrants from elsewhere, such as the Middle East. To buff up this analysis, they are analysing DNA preserved in the skeletons of other ancient inhabitants of central Europe.
I don't get why we can't have Otzi's genome sequence out in the open already. I realize that it's a precious resource that can lead to lots of publications for the people involved, but at the expense of delaying the use of the genome by everyone else. Otzi wasn't a milk drinker but he is sure as hell being milked dry by the people in charge.
Wow, "they are analyzing DNA preserved in skeletons of other ancient inhabitants of Central Europe"
ReplyDeleteDoes this mean they will publish not one sequence, but a few??
@pconroy I was just about to comment to that effect, and also to complain that the whole thing is even worse if they're sitting on *several* high resolution samples of Central European ancient DNA.
ReplyDeleteOtzi wasn't a milk drinker but he is sure as hell being milked dry by the people in charge.
ReplyDeleteWe don't know whether he was a milk drinker or not. All we know on that issue is that he did not carry any of the currently known mutations that confer lactose tolerance. But as many of the lactose tolerance genes in humans probably have not been found yet, there is a good chance that he was lactose tolerant.
Or perhaps the descendant of a Neolithic lineage from the Middle East that died out in Europe?
ReplyDeleteAll we know on that issue is that he did not carry any of the currently known mutations that confer lactose tolerance
ReplyDeleteI was referring both to his lack of the lactose tolerance mutation, as well as the contents of his stomach, at least as they have appeared in the media.
There is a preview of something concerning this on a forthcoming PBS Nova National Geographic special on October 26th:
ReplyDeleteThe Iceman Murder
http://video.pbs.org/video/2126510328/
Something begins to emerge. Scholars argue that the transhumance began only in the Bronze Age, so Otzi was not a shepherd, he didn't bring goats on the high grazing , as someone think.
ReplyDeleteIt seems that the arrow that killed him is made with flint of the plateau of Verona, the flint in the hands of Otzi probably came from a region between Vicenza and Verona called Lessina.
Why he climbed to 3200 meters and who chased him , or held out an ambush to him in that place, we'll never know.
I have only one question to which it is impossible to answer.
ReplyDeleteOtzi had valuables thinghs , clothes and tools and the copper ax, but the murderer, or the murderers, have not taken anything.
I think it's a very strange thing. It seems the murderer was in hurry.
DagoRed says: "the flint in the hands of Otzi probably came from a region between Vicenza and Verona called Lessina".
ReplyDeleteThere isn't a place called "Lessina", but the "Monti Lessini" and we can say "Lessinia". If I hypothesized you were an Italian, now I am understanding you aren't.
@Gioiello
ReplyDeleteI missed a I, it was Lessinia, of course.
I'm italian from Lazio, near Rome, but I think this isn't so important.
ReplyDelete