Posted on November 19, 2013 •
Updated February 23, 2017 —by Blake de Pastino
The frozen remains of a horse more
than half a million years old have reluctantly given up their genetic secrets,
providing scientists with the oldest DNA ever sequenced.
The horse was
discovered in 2003 in the ancient permafrost of Canada’s west-central Yukon
Territory, not far from the Alaskan border.
And although the animal was dated
to between 560,000 and 780,000 years old, an international team of researchers
was able to use a new combination of techniques to decipher its genetic code.
Among the team’s findings is that
the genus Equus — which includes all horses,
donkeys, and zebras — dates back more than 4 million years, twice as long ago
as scientists had previously believed.
“When we started the project,
everyone — including us, to be honest — thought it was impossible,” said Dr.
Ludovic Orlando of the University of Copenhagen, who coordinated the research,
in a statement to Western Digs.
“And it was to some extent, with
the methods available by then. So it’s clearly methodological advances that
made this possible.”
Orlando and his colleagues
published their findings this summer in the journal Nature; he discussed them
today in a lecture at The Royal Society, London.
Previous to this, the oldest
genome ever sequenced was of a 120,000-year-old polar bear — no small feat
considering that the half-life of a DNA molecule is estimated to be about 521
years.
By this reckoning, even under the
best conditions, DNA could remain intact for no more than 6.8 million years.
But Orlando’s team was able to
make the most of what they had for a number of reasons, he said.
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