
Ancient protein from pre-human teeth reveals genetic secrets of human evolutionary tree
Researchers have extracted 2 million-year-old protein remains from ancient pre-human teeth to reveal biological sex and genetic variability.
Researchers have extracted 2 million-year-old protein remains from ancient pre-human teeth to reveal biological sex and genetic variability.
The teeth are from Paranthropus robustus, an extinct hominin genus that emerged and evolved in Africa between 2.8 and 1.2 Ma. It is considered to be a side branch of our evolutionary tree. It walked on two legs and co-existed with early species of Homo in Africa, possibly interacting.
The work, published in the journal Science, marks a significant breakthrough in human evolution studies. It provides some of the oldest human genetic data from Africa and reveals previously undetected genetic variability.
'Because we can sample multiple African Pleistocene hominin individuals classified within the same group, we're now able to observe not just biological sex but, for the first time, genetic differences that might have existed among them,' says the study's co-lead Palesa Madupe.
Madupe is a postdoctoral research Fellow at the Globe Institute at the University of Copenhagen and research associate at the Human Evolution Research Institute (HERI) at the University of Cape Town.
The researchers used a technique called palaeoproteomics to retrieve ancient protein sequences from the teeth of four Paranthropus robustus fossils recovered from the cave site Swartkrans.
Solving the riddle
Using state-of-the-art mass spectrometry techniques, they partially reconstructed the ancient enamel protein sequences from the teeth. They found that two of the fossils are male and two are female. But how was this done?
Madupe explains: Among the proteins found in tooth enamel, there's one called amelogenin. This protein is unique because its genetic instructions are located on the sex chromosomes: biological females have a version called amelogenin X, while biological males have both amelogenin X and amelogenin Y.
'We used mass spectrometry to detect which protein fragments are present in the fossilised teeth we are analysing. The precise detection of amelogenin Y protein fragments allows us to confidently identify that specimen as belonging to a male individual.
'The challenge comes when we only detect amelogenin X protein fragments, as this could indicate either a female or a male individual whose amelogenin Y is not measured.
'To solve this, we developed a quantitative method for increasing certainty that the lack of amelogenin Y detection proves that those individuals are females.'
Eventually, two were identified as male and two as female, just by tiny ancient proteins.
Ancient diversity
A single genetic variant in another protein, enamelin, was also identified that differentiated the four specimens from one another.
Two specimens carried one version of the protein, a third carried another and a fourth specimen appeared to carry both.
Their methodology allows for the partial recovery of the amino acid sequences of specific proteins from dental enamel.
'You can imagine this 'amino acid sequence' as a sequence of letters, with each letter corresponding to a specific amino acid [and with 20 possible letters to choose from for each position of the sequence]. An amino acid sequence is usually characteristic of a species; members of the same species will have the same sequence of letters for a protein.
'When we recovered and looked at the enamelin sequence of the four specimens, we saw that the sequences differed at one letter; they had 'a single genetic variant'.'
Ioannis Patramanis and Claire Koenig, co-leads from the University of Copenhagen, explained that there are a number of reasons this difference could have occurred. For example, it could be that Paranthropus robustus has a high genetic diversity, or that the four samples belong to different populations or subspecies of Paranthropus, or that we sampled the same species but at different time points in its evolution.
'When studying proteins, specific mutations are thought to be characteristic of a species and, as such, used to identify it. We were thus quite surprised to discover that what we initially thought was a mutation uniquely describing Paranthropus robustus, was actually variable within that group; some individuals had it while others did not,' says Patramanis.
The future and DNA
HERI co-director Rebecca Ackermann was a senior author on the study, with contributions from co-director Robyn Pickering and several HERI research associates.
'Being able to accurately determine the sex of ancient fossils is a big breakthrough as it allows us to determine whether the variation we see in a sample is due to sexual dimorphism or other factors such as taxonomic diversity,' says Ackermann.
'This has the potential to help us understand sex-related differences in morphology and behaviour. It also provides some control for determining how many species are being sampled. It also may provide direct evidence for understanding the hominin family tree, though this is based on a very small amount of genetic information, so we need to be very cautious in these interpretations.
'Palaeoproteomics does give us insight into genetics, as DNA encodes proteins, so we can work backwards to reconstruct DNA sequences.
'But it's important to remember that the enamel proteome is very small, so this is just a tiny bit of genetic information. At this point, ancient proteins are our only genetic information for deep-time African fossils.
'DNA preservation is poor in African environments, and so far our time depth for understanding human evolution from ancient DNA in Africa is only about 20 thousand years. Only time will tell whether this can be pushed back further!' says Ackerman. DM
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

IOL News
9 hours ago
- IOL News
Groundbreaking study reveals biological sex and genetic diversity in Paranthropus robustus
Dr Palesa Madupe, Dr Claire Koenig and Dr Ioannis Patramanis. Image: Victor Yan Kin Lee Researchers from the University of Cape Town (UCT) and the University of Copenhagen have achieved a scientific first by using 2-million-year-old protein traces to determine the biological sex and uncover previously hidden genetic variation in Paranthropus robustus, an extinct close relative of modern humans. Published in the journal Science, the research analysed ancient proteins extracted from fossilised teeth discovered in South Africa's Cradle of Humankind. The remarkable discovery represents some of the oldest human genetic data ever recovered from Africa and challenges established understandings of this early hominin. The study's co-lead, Dr Palesa Madupe, a research associate at UCT's Human Evolution Research Institute (HERI) and postdoctoral fellow at the University of Copenhagen's Globe Institute, is part of a powerful African cohort transforming palaeoanthropology from within. "Because we can sample multiple African Pleistocene hominin individuals classified within the same group, we're now able to observe not just biological sex, but for the first time genetic differences that might have existed among them," said Madupe. UCT's HERI played a central role in the research, with co-director Professor Rebecca Ackermann as a senior author, and contributions from co-director Robyn Pickering and multiple HERI research associates. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Next Stay Close ✕ The team used cutting-edge palaeoproteomic techniques and mass spectrometry to identify sex-specific variants of amelogenin, a protein found in tooth enamel. Two of the ancient individuals were conclusively male; the others, inferred through novel quantitative methods, were female. Paper co-lead and postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Protein Research, University of Copenhagen, Claire Koenig, explained: 'Enamel is extremely valuable because it provides information about both biological sex and evolutionary relationships. However, since identifying females relies on the absence of specific protein variants, it is crucial to rigorously control our methods to ensure confident results.' The university explained that unexpectedly, another enamel protein – enamelin, revealed genetic diversity among the four individuals. Two shared a particular variant, a third had a distinct one, and a fourth displayed both. Co-lead and postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Copenhagen's Globe Institute Ioannis Patramanis said while studying proteins, specific mutations are thought to be characteristic of a species. 'We were thus quite surprised to discover that what we initially thought was a mutation uniquely describing Paranthropus robustus was actually variable within that group,' said Patramanis. The university added that this revelation forces a rethink of how ancient hominin species are identified, showing genetic variation, not just skeletal traits, must be considered in understanding their complexity. According to the researchers, Paranthropus lived in Africa between 2.8 and 1.2 million years ago, walking upright and likely coexisting with early members of Homo. Though on a different evolutionary path, its story remains central to understanding human origins. Madupe added that this study not only advances palaeoproteomics in Africa, but also highlights the vital role of African scholars in rewriting human history. 'As a young African researcher, I'm honoured to have significantly contributed to such a high-impact publication as its co-lead. But it's not lost on me that people of colour have a long journey to go before it becomes commonplace more of us need to be leading research like this,' said Madupe. Get your news on the go, click here to join the Cape Argus News WhatsApp channel. Ackermann detailed that HERI was actively leading that shift and the institute launched programmes introducing palaeoproteomic techniques to a new generation of African scientists and is expanding training across the continent. 'We are excited about the capacity building that has come out of this collaboration. The future of African-led palaeoanthropology research is bright,' Ackerman said. Cape Argus


Daily Maverick
4 days ago
- Daily Maverick
Ancient protein from pre-human teeth reveals genetic secrets of human evolutionary tree
Researchers have extracted 2 million-year-old protein remains from ancient pre-human teeth to reveal biological sex and genetic variability. Researchers have extracted 2 million-year-old protein remains from ancient pre-human teeth to reveal biological sex and genetic variability. The teeth are from Paranthropus robustus, an extinct hominin genus that emerged and evolved in Africa between 2.8 and 1.2 Ma. It is considered to be a side branch of our evolutionary tree. It walked on two legs and co-existed with early species of Homo in Africa, possibly interacting. The work, published in the journal Science, marks a significant breakthrough in human evolution studies. It provides some of the oldest human genetic data from Africa and reveals previously undetected genetic variability. 'Because we can sample multiple African Pleistocene hominin individuals classified within the same group, we're now able to observe not just biological sex but, for the first time, genetic differences that might have existed among them,' says the study's co-lead Palesa Madupe. Madupe is a postdoctoral research Fellow at the Globe Institute at the University of Copenhagen and research associate at the Human Evolution Research Institute (HERI) at the University of Cape Town. The researchers used a technique called palaeoproteomics to retrieve ancient protein sequences from the teeth of four Paranthropus robustus fossils recovered from the cave site Swartkrans. Solving the riddle Using state-of-the-art mass spectrometry techniques, they partially reconstructed the ancient enamel protein sequences from the teeth. They found that two of the fossils are male and two are female. But how was this done? Madupe explains: Among the proteins found in tooth enamel, there's one called amelogenin. This protein is unique because its genetic instructions are located on the sex chromosomes: biological females have a version called amelogenin X, while biological males have both amelogenin X and amelogenin Y. 'We used mass spectrometry to detect which protein fragments are present in the fossilised teeth we are analysing. The precise detection of amelogenin Y protein fragments allows us to confidently identify that specimen as belonging to a male individual. 'The challenge comes when we only detect amelogenin X protein fragments, as this could indicate either a female or a male individual whose amelogenin Y is not measured. 'To solve this, we developed a quantitative method for increasing certainty that the lack of amelogenin Y detection proves that those individuals are females.' Eventually, two were identified as male and two as female, just by tiny ancient proteins. Ancient diversity A single genetic variant in another protein, enamelin, was also identified that differentiated the four specimens from one another. Two specimens carried one version of the protein, a third carried another and a fourth specimen appeared to carry both. Their methodology allows for the partial recovery of the amino acid sequences of specific proteins from dental enamel. 'You can imagine this 'amino acid sequence' as a sequence of letters, with each letter corresponding to a specific amino acid [and with 20 possible letters to choose from for each position of the sequence]. An amino acid sequence is usually characteristic of a species; members of the same species will have the same sequence of letters for a protein. 'When we recovered and looked at the enamelin sequence of the four specimens, we saw that the sequences differed at one letter; they had 'a single genetic variant'.' Ioannis Patramanis and Claire Koenig, co-leads from the University of Copenhagen, explained that there are a number of reasons this difference could have occurred. For example, it could be that Paranthropus robustus has a high genetic diversity, or that the four samples belong to different populations or subspecies of Paranthropus, or that we sampled the same species but at different time points in its evolution. 'When studying proteins, specific mutations are thought to be characteristic of a species and, as such, used to identify it. We were thus quite surprised to discover that what we initially thought was a mutation uniquely describing Paranthropus robustus, was actually variable within that group; some individuals had it while others did not,' says Patramanis. The future and DNA HERI co-director Rebecca Ackermann was a senior author on the study, with contributions from co-director Robyn Pickering and several HERI research associates. 'Being able to accurately determine the sex of ancient fossils is a big breakthrough as it allows us to determine whether the variation we see in a sample is due to sexual dimorphism or other factors such as taxonomic diversity,' says Ackermann. 'This has the potential to help us understand sex-related differences in morphology and behaviour. It also provides some control for determining how many species are being sampled. It also may provide direct evidence for understanding the hominin family tree, though this is based on a very small amount of genetic information, so we need to be very cautious in these interpretations. 'Palaeoproteomics does give us insight into genetics, as DNA encodes proteins, so we can work backwards to reconstruct DNA sequences. 'But it's important to remember that the enamel proteome is very small, so this is just a tiny bit of genetic information. At this point, ancient proteins are our only genetic information for deep-time African fossils. 'DNA preservation is poor in African environments, and so far our time depth for understanding human evolution from ancient DNA in Africa is only about 20 thousand years. Only time will tell whether this can be pushed back further!' says Ackerman. DM

IOL News
20-05-2025
- IOL News
Blade banks on working group on US funding cuts
SCIENCE, Technology and Innovation (STI) Minister Blade Nzimande has announced a 12-member working group to advise him on the implications and impact of the recent withdrawal of funding by the US government from key research and development programmes in South Africa. The group consists of some of the country's prominent names in the sector including Universities' South Africa chairperson Prof Francis Petersen, Stellenbosch University Deputy Vice Chancellor for Research, Professor Sibusiso Moyo, South African Medical Research Council chief executive Professor Ntobeko Ntusi and Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) chief executive Dr Thulani Dlamini. They will help analyse the impact and implications of the US withdrawal of funds to South African public research and innovation; analyse the current geo-political risks related to STI and how South Africa should position itself to deal with the current situation; and propose policy and strategic responses to enhance the long-term security and sustainability of the STI system and the role of the department.