Neanderthals `bred with modern humans` 37,000 years ago

Modern Europeans interbred with Neanderthals as recently as 37,000 years ago, a new research has found.

Washington: Modern Europeans interbred with Neanderthals as recently as 37,000 years ago, a new research has found.

Researchers from Harvard and the Max Planck Institute made the estimate in an attempt to work out why the Neanderthals are more closely related to people from outside Africa.

Their findings suggest that when modern humans emerged from that continent they encountered other hominids and had children with them, who are the ancestors of people across Europe and Asia.

The study backs up recent research which suggests that early humans and Neanderthals lived side by side in caves in northern Israel.

To discover why Neanderthals are most closely related to people outside Africa, scientists estimated the date when Neanderthals and modern Europeans last shared ancestors.

The research provides a historical context for the interbreeding.

When the Neanderthal genome was sequenced in 2010 it revealed that people outside Africa share slightly more genetic variants with Neanderthals than Africans do.

One scenario that could explain this observation is that modern humans mixed with Neanderthals when they came out of Africa.

An alternative, but more complex, scenario is that African populations ancestral to both Neanderthals and modern humans remained subdivided over a few hundred thousand years and that those more related to Neanderthals subsequently left Africa.

Dr. Sriram Sankararaman and colleagues measured the length of DNA pieces in the genomes of Europeans that are similar to Neanderthals.

Since recombination between chromosomes when egg and sperm cells are formed reduces the size of such pieces in each generation, the Neanderthal-related pieces will be smaller the longer they have spent in the genomes of present-day people.

The team estimated that Neanderthals and modern humans last exchanged genes between 37,000 and 86,000 years ago, well after modern humans appeared outside Africa but potentially before they started spreading across Eurasia.

This suggests that Neanderthals (or their close relatives) had children with the direct ancestors of present-day people outside Africa.

The study finding was published in the journal `PLoS Genetics`.

PTI

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