Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Blonde or Brunette - single DNA change can decide hair colour

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 02 Jun, 2014 01:33 PM
  • Blonde or Brunette - single DNA change can decide hair colour
To get a blonde look, you soon may not need to visit a hair clinic or a specialist barber. A single-letter change in the genetic code is enough to generate blonde hair in humans, fascinating research shows.
 
In a first, the study outlines how tiny DNA changes can reverberate through our genome in ways that may affect evolution, migration and even human history.
 
"This particular genetic variation in humans is associated with blonde hair, but it is not associated with eye colour or other pigmentation traits," said David Kingsley from Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) at Stanford University.
 
According to Kingsley, a handful of genes likely determine hair colour in humans.
 
For over a decade, Kingsley studied the three-spined stickleback, a small fish whose marine ancestors began to colonise lakes and streams at the end of the last Ice Age.
 
The researchers found that the blonde hair commonly seen in northern Europeans is caused by a single change in the DNA that regulates the expression of a gene named Kit ligand.
 
"The very same gene that we found controlling skin colour in fish showed one of the strongest signatures of selection in different human populations around the world," Kingsley explained.
 
Kit ligand encodes a protein that aids the development of pigment-producing cells.
 
"So it made sense that changing its activity could affect hair or skin colour," researchers said.
 
Catherine Guenther, an HHMI research specialist in Kingsley's lab, began experiments to search for regulatory switches that might specifically control hair colour.
 
"When we found the hair follicle switch, we could then ask what is different between blondes and brunettes in northern Europe," Kingsley said.
 
Examining the DNA in that regulatory segment, they found a single letter of genetic code that differed between individuals with different hair colours.
 
"Given Kit ligand's range of activities throughout the body, many such regulatory elements are likely scattered throughout the DNA that surrounds the gene. We think the genome is littered with switches," Kingsley emphasised.
 
It is clear that this hair colour change is occurring through a regulatory mechanism that operates only in the hair.
 
"This is not something that also affects other traits, like intelligence or personality. The change that causes blonde hair is, literally, only skin deep," Kingsley added.
 
The study was published in the journal Nature Genetics.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Teen depression may kill love life even in middle-age

Teen depression may kill love life even in middle-age
Negative emotions suffered when one was young can have a lasting grip on love relationships well into middle-age, new research says.

Teen depression may kill love life even in middle-age

Scientists rewrite code of life with 'alien' DNA

Scientists rewrite code of life with 'alien' DNA
In a major breakthrough that could re-write the history of life on earth, scientists have successfully added an alien pair of DNA "letters" (or bases) to create the first "semi-synthetic" bacterium.

Scientists rewrite code of life with 'alien' DNA

Now, a DNA tool to spot cancer

Now, a DNA tool to spot cancer
Detecting cancer could soon become a lot easier as scientists have used DNA to develop a tool that detects and reacts to chemical changes caused by cancer cells.

Now, a DNA tool to spot cancer

What you were waiting for! A device that detects pee in pool

What you were waiting for! A device that detects pee in pool
Those who have a habit of peeing in a swimming pool, beware. Here comes a device glows green the moment it detects traces of human waste in water.

What you were waiting for! A device that detects pee in pool

Do humans have spiders' genes?

Do humans have spiders' genes?
Not only the spiderman, even you may share certain genomic similarities with spiders, a study that for the first time sequenced the genome of a spider has revealed.

Do humans have spiders' genes?

Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?

Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?
Angry people do not always raise a ruckus; they may also bring about positive changes to society with a new study showing that anger may be more effective at motivating people to volunteer than other motives.

Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?