Rat DNA
reveals human migration history
June 7, 2004
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and
World Science Staff
An analysis of rat DNA may help unravel the puzzling origins of the Polynesian
people and their ancestors in Oceania, a large group of islands in the Western
Pacific.
Scientists
believe that the seafaring Lapita culture, which appeared in the Western
Pacific about 3,500 years ago, is ancestral to Polynesian and many other
Pacific cultures. As the Lapita colonists spread throughout Oceania they
introduced several species of plants and animals, including the Pacific rat, Rattus
exulans, which was often transported as food in the colonizing canoes.
Since these rats do not swim, humans were solely responsible for their
dispersal throughout the Pacific.
To
trace the pattern of human migration within Oceania, Elizabeth Matisoo-Smith
and colleagues compared mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences of ancient and
modern rat populations throughout the Pacific and Island Southeast Asia.
Mitochondrial DNA is a type of DNA passed down only through the female line,
and present in energy-producing cellular organelles called mitochondria.
By
creating evolutionary trees of rat mtDNA, the researchers identified three
geographically distinct populations. These results are inconsistent with what
are known as "Fast Train" models of Lapita migration, which
emphasize rapid dispersal from Southeast Asia to Polynesia, with little or no
contact with indigenous people along the way.
Rather,
the results suggest a slower and more complex migration scenario involving
significant interactions among populations. The authors note that integrating
these results with data from archaeology, comparative linguistics, and
molecular biology of human populations will further illuminate the complex
prehistory of this region.
The
research, from the University of Auckland, is published in the June 7 early
online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a
research journal.