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Home NEWS Science News Health

Ancient DNA Uncovers Widespread Selection in West Eurasia

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
April 16, 2026
in Health
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Ancient DNA research has revolutionized our understanding of human population history, revealing intricate patterns of migration, admixture, and demographic change. However, the promise of ancient DNA to illuminate the evolutionary biology of our species—to unearth the selective forces that have shaped our genomes—has largely gone unfulfilled. This gap exists primarily because of the limited scale of ancient DNA datasets and the inherent difficulty in teasing apart signals of natural selection from confounding factors like population structure, gene flow, or neutral genetic drift.

Now, a breakthrough study published in Nature by Akbari, Perry, Barton, and colleagues confronts these challenges head-on, deploying a novel method designed to detect directional selection in ancient DNA time-series. By analyzing an unprecedented dataset of 15,836 ancient individuals from West Eurasia, including more than 10,000 newly sequenced genomes, the authors provide sweeping insights into how natural selection has acted on the human genome over the last ten millennia. This deep chronicle of selection adds vital context to the narrative of human evolution, showing that powerful adaptive sweeps became widespread in recent millennia, contrasting with the scarcity of classic “hard sweeps” seen in earlier epochs.

The methodological leap lies in the team’s ability to discern consistent, directional allele frequency shifts over time, distinguishing true adaptive change from mere demographic fluctuations. Prior work had struggled to resolve whether allele frequency alterations reflected positive selection or were artifacts of complex population dynamics such as migrations or admixture. Here, leveraging massive sample sizes and sophisticated statistical approaches, the researchers map trajectories of 9.7 million genetic variants, revealing a landscape marked by persistent directional selection rather than random noise.

Strikingly, the authors document hundreds of alleles exhibiting strong signals of directional selection, with selection strengths robust enough to drive allele frequency change that parallels modern population variation levels in important complex traits. These findings challenge the previously held notion that hard selective sweeps—mutations rapidly rising to fixation—have been rare in human evolution. The results underscore that in recent evolutionary history, subtle but widespread polygenic adaptation has shaped traits controlling physiology, cognition, and disease risk.

Among the most compelling observations is the identification of coordinated allele frequency shifts in loci associated with complex phenotypes. The study highlights significant decreases in predicted genetic proxies for body fat and schizophrenia susceptibility over the millennia. Simultaneously, alleles linked to measures of cognitive performance show a marked increase. These trends collectively paint a picture of directional selection shaping human biology along cognitive and metabolic axes, although the authors caution that how these modern-trait predictions relate to past adaptive phenotypes remains an open question.

Interestingly, these adaptive changes coincide temporally with the establishment of more complex societies and the advent of agriculture and industry, suggesting that cultural innovations may have imposed new selective pressures. The interplay between environment, culture, and genetics emerges as a critical determinant of human evolutionary trajectories, amplifying the importance of large-scale interdisciplinary approaches that couple archaeogenetics with anthropology and paleoenvironmental studies.

From a technical standpoint, the study exemplifies the power of combining dense ancient time-series with advanced statistical models capturing allele frequency covariance structures. By modeling the temporal dynamics of allele frequencies while explicitly controlling for population structure and gene flow, the authors achieve a resolution that surpasses earlier studies relying on snapshot comparisons or coarser inference methods. This approach permits the accurate estimation of selection coefficients across millions of variants, furnishing a granular view of how Darwinian forces sculpt genetic architecture over millennia.

The implications extend beyond understanding past human evolution; they also illuminate the genetic basis of contemporary health and disease. The observed selection on alleles influencing psychiatric disorders and metabolic traits indicates a longstanding evolutionary dialogue shaping susceptibility and resilience to modern ailments. Furthermore, the pervasive directional selection on cognitive function-related variants underscores evolutionary pressures on neurological phenotypes, potentially reflecting complex trade-offs between cognition, behavior, and environmental demands.

While the study marks a milestone, it also highlights the limitations of current knowledge in linking predicted genetic trait changes to fitness in historic environments. The phenotypic proxies employed are derived from modern genome-wide association studies, which capture trait variation in contemporary populations living in vastly different ecological and social contexts. Therefore, translating these genomic signals into a full understanding of historic adaptations will require integrative efforts combining ancient phenotypic reconstructions, functional genomics, and modeling of past environments.

This body of work sets a new standard for studying selection in ancient human genomes, showcasing how large sample sizes and innovative statistical frameworks can unmask subtle evolutionary processes. The enormous dataset and fine-grained selection estimates pave the way for future explorations into how natural selection has shaped traits ranging from immunity and metabolism to cognition and behavior, deepening our grasp of human biology and its complex history.

Ultimately, the research reveals that human evolution in the recent past is a dynamic tapestry, woven from hundreds of small shifts across the genome, each nudging adaptation in new directions. This perspective moves beyond the classic model of sweeping single-gene adaptations toward a nuanced understanding of polygenic selection shaping traits under complex selective regimes. As more ancient DNA samples become available and methodologies further refine, our picture of human evolutionary biology will only grow richer, unmasking the hidden dynamics that have sculpted our species.

Akbari and colleagues’ contribution stands out for illuminating this intricate evolutionary dance with unprecedented clarity and scale, opening fresh avenues for deciphering the genetic and environmental forces that have fashioned humanity. Their work is poised to influence fields ranging from evolutionary genomics and anthropology to medical genetics, charting a promising course for uncovering the evolutionary past embedded within our DNA.

Subject of Research:
Human evolutionary biology and directional natural selection in ancient West Eurasian populations using large-scale ancient DNA time-series.

Article Title:
Ancient DNA reveals pervasive directional selection across West Eurasia.

Article References:
Akbari, A., Perry, A., Barton, A.R. et al. Ancient DNA reveals pervasive directional selection across West Eurasia. Nature (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10358-1

Image Credits:
AI Generated

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10358-1

Tags: adaptive genetic sweeps in human historyancient DNA analysis in West Eurasiachallenges in identifying selection from population structuredetecting directional selection in ancient genomesevolutionary impact of natural selection on human genomesgene flow and genetic drift confounding factorsgenomic adaptations over the last ten millenniahuman evolutionary biology and natural selectionlarge-scale ancient DNA datasetsmigration and admixture patterns in prehistoric populationsnovel methods for evolutionary geneticsprehistoric demographic changes in Eurasia

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