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May 2009

May 2009
Scientific American Magazine

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What Makes Us Human?; May 2009; Scientific American Magazine; by Katherine S. Pollard; 6 Page(s)

Six years ago I jumped at an opportunity to join the international team that was identifying the sequence of DNA bases, or letters, in the genome of the common chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes). As a biostatistician with a long-standing interest in human origins, I was eager to line up the human DNA sequence next to that of our closest living relative and take stock. A humbling truth emerged: our DNA blueprints are nearly 99 percent identical to theirs. That is, of the three billion letters that make up the human genome, only 15 million of themless than 1 percenthave changed in the six million years or so since the human and chimp lineages diverged.

Evolutionary theory holds that the vast majority of these changes had little or no effect on our biology. But somewhere among those roughly 15 million bases lay the differences that made us human. I was determined to find them. Since then, I and others have made tantalizing progress in identifying a number of DNA sequences that set us apart from chimps.



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