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Home > News > Science > Health

December 18th, 2005, 14:28 GMT · By Tudor Raiciu

The Europeans' Skin Is in Fact Black

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Change in skin color for the humans who migrated from Africa to Europe was caused by the mutation of one amino acid in a single gene, Penn State University researchers said.

"The mutation explains part of the lingering mystery of how human skin colors evolved during the last 50,000 years as modern humans migrated across the world after leaving Africa. This really calls into question our ideas about race," said
Mark Shriver, one of the study's authors.

Previous studies on pigmentation have identified more than 100 genes involved in pigment production. Alterations in some of these genes are associated with disorders such as albinism. However, most of the genes responsible for normal differences in skin pigmentation remained unknown.

The gene, SLC24A5, identified by Keith Cheng and his team, had not been suspected to be involved in pigmentation.

The study was based on the zebrafish, used in genetics because of its similarities with the human genes. In people of European descent, the melanosomes are fewer, smaller, and lighter than those from people of West African ancestry.

Researchers discovered that a certain type of zebrafish, called "golden", also had fewer, smaller, and less heavily pigmented melanosomes than normal fish.

By adding the gene from the normal fish to the golden one, they noticed a change in pigmentation.

"By default, we are all dark-skinned," a Yale professor said.

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Comment #1 by: david j perry on 22 Mar 2009, 19:36 UTC reply to this comment

we probably lost the black skin pigmentation when we started living in caves to escape predators and unfriendly weather


Comment #2 by: Joe on 23 Mar 2009, 02:13 UTC reply to this comment

How does this 'call into question our ideas about race'?


Comment #3 by: Makronic on 23 Mar 2009, 10:00 UTC reply to this comment

Yeah, good question... How does this call our ideas about race into question? Race goes beyond skin pigmentation, and the colour of our skin is certainly not (and should certainly not be) the focal point of race distinctions.

In the end though, remember that we are much more alike than we are different. Both between races and within races.


Comment #4 by: Mahoozafat on 23 Mar 2009, 11:49 UTC reply to this comment

I would think that a lot of people believe that people of different races are very different genetically and physically. All sorts of white supremacist groups believe that. So this finding would be undeniable proof that our skin is almost identical genetically.


Comment #5 by: denis on 23 Mar 2009, 13:50 UTC reply to this comment

White supremacists have already ignored a hundred years of anthropology/history/evolutionary science that contradicts what they believe, I don't see them being swayed by one more piece of evidence.


Comment #6 by: kane on 23 Mar 2009, 18:10 UTC reply to this comment

What about God! He only created one man and one woman! So how did we get different colors? I know that Adam and Eve were white, I've seen the paintings.

:) Just kidding.


Comment #7 by: Geoff on 23 Mar 2009, 18:45 UTC reply to this comment

"By default, we are all dark-skinned," a Yale professor said

Wow, good to know that Yale professors now deal in the NO KIDDING department. I thought this was fairly common knowledge at the fourth grade level. I guess I should consider myself lucky I didn't go to Yale.


Comment #8 by: Mamainak on 23 Mar 2009, 21:28 UTC reply to this comment

Actually, there is no 'race' when it comes to humans...it's just superficial differences. If you look up DNA from a person, you couldn't tell what 'race' it is. We all have same DNA structure, therefore, we are the same race


Comment #9 by: Sharon on 23 Mar 2009, 22:53 UTC reply to this comment

I agree with Makronic there are more differences in race than just skin colour. We are all human, but we are all different too.


Comment #10 by: Colored on 24 Mar 2009, 02:28 UTC reply to this comment

Make a white baby black? Nice.... How about a glowing baby from a gene found in bioluminescent jellyfish. That would be something to 'rave' about. How about a 'designer' baby where we turn on the gay gene and make a rainbow colored baby. If I could afford it I would turn my baby white.


Comment #11 by: Josh on 24 Mar 2009, 14:00 UTC reply to this comment

I thought we all started out from a black man and woman in Africa, as a genetic study would have us believe. That came out years ago so this study=fail.

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