PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Neanderthal gene variants associated with greater pain sensitivity

2023-10-10
(Press-News.org) People who carry three gene variants that have bene inherited from Neanderthals are more sensitive to some types of pain, according to a new study co-led by UCL researchers.

The findings, published in Communications Biology, are the latest findings to show how past interbreeding with Neanderthals has influenced the genetics of modern humans.

The researchers found that people carrying three so-called Neanderthal variants in the gene SCN9A, which is implicated in sensory neurons, are more sensitive to pain from skin pricking after prior exposure to mustard oil.

Previous research has identified three variations in the SCN9A gene — known as M932L, V991L, and D1908G — in sequenced Neanderthal genomes and reports of greater pain sensitivity among humans carrying all three variants. However, prior to this study the specific sensory responses affected by these variants was unclear.

An international team led by researchers at UCL, Aix-Marseille University, University of Toulouse, Open University, Fudan University, and Oxford University, and part-funded by Wellcome, measured the pain thresholds of 1,963 people from Colombia in response to a range of stimuli.

The SCN9A gene encodes a sodium channel that is expressed at high levels in sensory neurons that detect signals from damaged tissue. The researchers found that the D1908G variant of the gene was present in around 20% of chromosomes within this population and around 30% of chromosomes carrying this variant also carried the M932L and V991L variants.

The authors found that the three variants were associated with a lower pain threshold in response to skin pricking after prior exposure to mustard oil, but not in response to heat or pressure. Additionally, carrying all three variants was associated with greater pain sensitivity than carrying only one.

When they analysed the genomic region including SCN9A using genetic data from 5,971 people from Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru, the authors found that the three Neanderthal variants were more common in populations with higher proportions of Native American ancestry, such as the Peruvian population, in which the average proportion of Native American ancestry was 66%.

The authors propose that the Neanderthal variants may sensitise sensory neurons by altering the threshold at which a nerve impulse is generated. They speculate that the variants may be more common in populations with higher proportions of Native American ancestry as a result of random chance and population bottlenecks that occurred during the initial occupation of the Americas. Although acute pain can moderate behaviour and prevent further injury, the scientists that say additional research is needed to determine whether carrying these variants and having greater pain sensitivity may have been advantageous during human evolution.

Previous research by co-corresponding author Dr Kaustubh Adhikari (UCL Genetics, Evolution & Environment and The Open University) has shown that humans also inherited some genetic material from Neanderthals affecting the shape of our noses.*

Dr Adhikari commented: “In the last 15 years, since the Neanderthal genome was first sequenced, we have been learning more and more about what we have inherited from them as a result of interbreeding tens of thousands of years ago.

“Pain sensitivity is an important survival trait that enables us to avoid painful things that could cause us serious harm. Our findings suggest that Neanderthals may have been more sensitive to certain types of pain, but further research is needed for us to understand why that is the case, and whether these specific genetic variants were evolutionarily advantageous.”

First author Dr Pierre Faux (Aix-Marseille University and University of Toulouse) said: “We have shown how variation in our genetic code can alter how we perceive pain, including genes that modern humans acquired from the Neanderthals. But genes are just one of many factors, including environment, past experience, and psychological factors, which influence pain.”

 

* UCL News, 2023: Nose shape gene inherited from Neanderthals

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study shows little improvement in mandated disaster plans, despite required updates

2023-10-10
LAWRENCE — Hurricanes, floods, heat waves and other disasters are striking the United States with increased severity and frequency, and since 2000 the Federal Disaster Mitigation Act has required states and local jurisdictions to have plans in place to reduce damages from such events. A new study from the University of Kansas has found little improvement over time to these plans, in spite of regularly required updates. Plans to mitigate risk from natural hazards hold the potential to help states and local communities proactively steer development into safer areas and reduce exposure of existing housing, businesses, roads and other vital assets. ...

New model explains precious metals in Earth’s mantle

New model explains precious metals in Earth’s mantle
2023-10-10
SAN ANTONIO — October 10, 2023 —Southwest Research Institute’s Dr. Simone Marchi collaborated on a new study finding the first geophysically plausible scenario to explain the abundance of certain precious metals — including gold and platinum — in the Earth’s mantle. Based on the simulations, or model, scientists found that impact-driven mixing of mantle materials scenario that could prevent the metals from completely sinking into the Earth’s core. Early in its evolution, about 4.5 billion years ago, Earth sustained an impact with a Mars-sized planet, and the Moon formed from the resulting debris ejected ...

Discovery reveals fragile X syndrome begins developing even before birth

Discovery reveals fragile X syndrome begins developing even before birth
2023-10-10
Fragile X syndrome, the most common form of inherited intellectual disability, may be unfolding in brain cells even before birth, despite typically going undiagnosed until age 3 or later. A new study published today in the journal Neuron by researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison showed that FMRP, a protein deficient in individuals with fragile X syndrome, has a role in the function of mitochondria, part of a cell that produces energy, during prenatal development. Their results fundamentally change how scientists understand the developmental origins of fragile ...

Women with a disability are more likely to experience child marriage than women without a disability

2023-10-10
In 2015, the United Nations created the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to achieve by 2030. With only seven years to go, the world is not on track to meet the goal of eliminating child marriage and other forms of violence against women and girls.  Child marriage has been linked with negative reproductive and mental health outcomes.  Although there have been some improvements around the world toward the UN goal, progress towards reducing child marriage has been uneven and stagnant, particularly in fragile states where ...

National Jewish Health study examines COVID vaccine protection for patients with lung conditions

2023-10-10
DENVER — Clinicians and researchers at National Jewish Health studied COVID vaccine effectiveness in patients with underlying lung conditions such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and interstitial lung disease (ILD). Findings show that nearly half of respiratory patients have lower vaccine-specific antibody, B cell, and T cell responses compared to healthy individuals. Decreased immunity to the vaccine suggests that patients with underlying lung conditions may be less protected against COVID-19. Understanding why they aren’t responding can give doctors a chance to treat patients differently. “Most ...

Humans can make abstract choices independent of motor actions, but in lab tasks, choices are typically reported with an associated action

Humans can make abstract choices independent of motor actions, but in lab tasks, choices are typically reported with an associated action
2023-10-10
Humans can make abstract choices independent of motor actions, but in lab tasks, choices are typically reported with an associated action; this study shows that the human brain encodes perceptual choices independently of the specific motor actions used to implement them, even if such abstraction is not required by the task context. ##### In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology: http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3002324 Article Title: Abstract perceptual choice signals during action-linked decisions in the human brain Author Countries: Germany Funding: ...

Pennington Biomedical scientists continue to rank among the world’s most cited researchers

Pennington Biomedical scientists continue to rank among the world’s most cited researchers
2023-10-10
BATON ROUGE – Five Pennington Biomedical Research Center faculty members and one adjunct professor rank among the most cited researchers in the world, according to the Google Scholar Citations database. The database shows 5,882 scholars across the world have an h-index at or above 100. The h-index is a gauge of productivity and the impact of published papers. The index takes into account the researcher’s total number of papers and how many times each was cited by other scholars. An h-index over 100 means that at least ...

UMass Amherst study finds gender differences in HIV stigma in the Dominican Republic

UMass Amherst study finds gender differences in HIV stigma in the Dominican Republic
2023-10-10
In a University of Massachusetts Amherst study recently published in PLOS ONE, researchers explored and described gender differences in HIV-related stigma and social support among people living with HIV (PLHIV) experiencing food insecurity in the Dominican Republic. “Men’s experience of stigma were subtler and women described outright rejection and instances of physical violence, including intimate partner violence,” says lead author and postdoctoral researcher Alane Celeste-Villalvir. For people living with HIV, stigma associated with the disease continues to be a significant ...

Chinese government’s corporate subsidies have had little effect on firms’ productivity

2023-10-10
Over the past 15 years, the Chinese government has made significant efforts to promote innovation-driven growth through industrial policy and corporate subsidies. In a new study, researchers examined government subsidies to businesses in China to determine whether they are making firms more productive. The study found that China’s rising wave of subsidizing businesses has had limited effect on promoting the firms’ productivity. The study, by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and ShanghaiTech University, appears in the Journal of Comparative Economics. “Many countries have criticized China ...

Syracuse paleoclimatologists use ancient sediment to explore future climate in Africa

Syracuse paleoclimatologists use ancient sediment to explore future climate in Africa
2023-10-10
In September 2023, extreme rains struck South Africa’s Western Cape province, flooding villages and leaving a trail of destruction. The catastrophic devastation is just one recent example in a string of extreme weather events that are growing more common around the world. Fueled by rising sea surface temperatures from global warming, torrential storms are increasing both in frequency and magnitude. Concurrently, global warming is also producing the opposite effect in other instances, as a mega-drought recently threatened the water supply of Cape Town in southwestern Africa to the point where residents were at risk of running out of water. This one-two punch of weather extremes ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study finds common breast cancer treatments may speed aging process

Ultra-powered MRI scans show damage to brain’s ‘control center’ is behind long-lasting Covid-19 symptoms

Despite progress, China remains tethered to coal as climate change pressures mount

Open Call: Journalists in Residence Program at Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA)

Small creatures, big impact

Researcher receives grant to enhance quantum machine learning education

Professor gives American grading system an F

NIH awards $2.2 million to UMass Amherst to explore new tuberculosis therapies

Immune-based treatment gets a boost to its cancer-fighting superpowers

First report of its kind describes HIV reservoir landscape in breast milk

Penn Nursing study finds link between nurse work environment quality and COVID-19 mortality disparities

Systematic review highlights decline in mental health care and increase in suicides following FDA youth antidepressant warnings

Food insufficiency increased with expiration of pandemic-era SNAP emergency allotments

Better-prepared emergency departments could save kids’ lives cost-effectively, Stanford Medicine-led study finds

Supplemental Medicare benefits still leave dental, vision, and hearing care out of reach for many

UW–Madison researchers use AI to identify sex-specific risks associated with brain tumors

George Mason researchers conducting AI exploration for snow water equivalent

Huskisson & Freeman studying gut health of red pandas

Brain’s waste-clearance pathways revealed for the first time

Plenty more fish in the sea? Environmental protections account for around 10 percent of fish stocks on coral reefs

Macaques give birth more easily than women: no maternal mortality at birth

Five George Mason researchers receive funding for Center for Climate Risks Applications

Advancing CRISPR: Lehigh University engineering researchers to develop predictive models for gene editing

Protecting confidentiality in adolescent patient portals

Gatling conducting digitization project

Regenstrief researcher awarded $1.9 million CDC grant

Independent expert report: The Human Brain Project significantly advanced neuroscience

Wu conducting molecular modeling of DR domain of HIV restriction factor PSGL-1

Nguyen working to make complex invariants accessible

Menstrual cycle luteal phase lengths are not 'fixed' at 13-14 days

[Press-News.org] Neanderthal gene variants associated with greater pain sensitivity