BY LISA M. KRIEGER Mercury News
Deep
down, we are all very much alike.
New
data confirms what scientists have long suspected: The
DNA of human beings is 99.9 percent identical. This finding,
reported in Friday's issue of Science, is a powerful statement
about the relatedness of all humans.
``Traditional
ways of distinguishing populations are irrelevant in terms
of genetic code,'' said Craig Venter, head of Celera Genomics
Corp., the private company that joined with a public consortium
of scientists to map the human genome. ``You cannot look
at a person's genes and say with any accuracy whether
they are from one racial group or another.''
In
fact, the variation between any two individuals in the
same racial group could be greater than that between two
different groups, Venter said at a recent Washington,
D.C., press briefing where he unveiled the data behind
his company's map of the human genome.
Many
Africans or people of recent African descent are more
closely related to Caucasians than they are to other Africans,
according to Venter. Likewise, distinctions between Chinese
people and Caucasians are virtually insignificant when
compared with those between groups from, say, parts of
east and west Africa, he said.
``Mapping
the DNA sequence variation in the human genome holds the
potential for promoting the fundamental unity of all humankind,''
according to Dr. Harold P. Freeman, a member of Celera's
Institutional Review Board.
``The
power of science can be used to eliminate public perceptions
of racial superiority and inferiority, which are the basis
of racism itself,'' said Freeman, president and director
of surgery at North General Hospital in New York City
and a leading authority on the inter-relationships between
race, poverty and cancer.
``In
this way,'' he said, ``the mapping of the human genome
could be pivotal in promoting the concept of one race,
the human race.''
The
mapping of the human genome was launched in 1989 by an
international consortium of federally funded researchers
and accelerated when Celera Genomics joined the effort
in 1998. The most recent findings on the genome were published
in last week's issues of the journals Nature and Science.
On
average, two unrelated people differ at just one of every
1,000 sites in their DNA -- and no genes, by themselves
or together, are able to predict a person's race, according
to Venter.
But
these tiny variations add up to roughly 3 million places
where two people may differ, creating traits such as hair
color, eye color or shade of skin. The variations occur
more in some races than others, he added.
Such
disparities can also predispose clusters of people to
ailments such as heart disease, cancer or depression.
They could also help explain the mystery of why some racial
and ethnic groups tend to dominate certain activities
-- such as Jews and Asians on stringed instruments, Russians
in chess, and Africans and African-Americans in track
events.
One
of the major goals of researchers studying the human genome
is to measure precise patterns of genetic differences
among human populations, revealing the history, journeys,
fluctuations in population size and mixing that occurred
among neighboring groups of humans.
Such
studies are based on the premise that some forms of genetic
material are rigidly passed down from parents to children,
weaving an unbroken line of ancestry that researchers
can trace.
Nobody
knows the identities of the people who donated their DNA
for the publicly funded genome team. But Venter said Celera's
studies deliberately selected DNA from five individuals:
one Asian-American, one African-American, one Latino and
two others, unidentified. He found no way of telling which
was which.
``No
serious scholar in this field considers race to be a scientific
concept,'' Venter said.
``We
all evolved out of the same three or four groups in Africa,
as black Africans,'' he said. With migrations, he said,
groups began to form and stabilize over time, and slight
differences began to emerge.
While
the gene mapping showed no genetic identifiers for races,
it did show a spectrum of subtle genetic differences within
races.
A
trait such as athletic ability is not directly linked
to a gene for skin color, the characteristic traditionally
used to define race, scientists note.
Instead,
it is probably linked to subtle physiological characteristics
that have been acquired over the course of evolution --
and may have concentrated in specific populations adapted
to different environments.
Tiny
variations called single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs),
the most common type of variation in the genome, may underlie
differences in traits such as muscle composition, the
body's response to exercise and metabolic efficiency --
traits which seem to be linked to success in certain sports.
The genetics of these traits are under study by doctors
Jesper L. Andersen and Peter Schjerling of the Copenhagen
Muscle Research Center, affiliated with the University
of Copenhagen.
The
challenge now is to understand how these and other variations
affect human health or disease.
Though
people cannot be clearly divided into ``races,'' scientists
can still detect certain patterns of SNPs that crop up
more in some parts of the world than others. This should
give researchers clues to the movements of different peoples
during history.
For
instance, genetic research has revealed ancient connections
between men in the western Irish province of Connaught
and the Basque region of Spain.
Such
findings, however, only show where people may have moved.
There is no basis to use genetics to support racist doctrines,
the scientists said.
``Throughout
recorded history and up to the present time, countless
human conflicts have occurred based on how groups of people
have seen, classified and behaved toward another group,''
said Celera's Freeman.
``The
biological concept of race . . . has no basis in science,''
he said.