WIKIMEDIA, Dmitry A. MottlScrutinizing 200 DNA samples from people in 10 native Siberian populations, researchers have identified three genes that are under direct natural selection to help inhabitants better cope with the cold conditions—such as average January temperatures of -25° C. The study, presented in a meeting in Cambridge earlier this month (January 18), identified one previously known cold-adaptive gene, UCP1, which helps body fat directly produce heat, as well as two new genes: PRKG1, which is involved in preventing heat loss, and ENPP7, which plays a role in metabolizing fats.

“The results are fascinating,” geneticist Danae Dodge of the University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom, who was not involved in the study, told ScienceNOW. They provide evidence that “we have continued to evolve in our modern world.”

The authors claim that the findings also support the idea that indigenous Siberian populations adapted in...

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