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We're All Mutants: The Average Human Has 60 New Genetic Mutations

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http://ca.news.yahoo.com/were-mutants-average-human-60-genetic-mutations-1612048\

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We're All Mutants: The Average Human Has 60 New Genetic Mutations

By Wolchover, Life's Little Mysteries Staff Writer

LiveScience.com | LiveScience.com – 9 hours ago

When parents pass their genes down to their children, an average of 60 errors

are introduced to the genetic code in the process, according to a new study. Any

of those five dozen mutations could be the source of major differences in a

person's appearance or behavior as compared to his or her parents — and

altogether, the mistakes are the driving force of evolution.

Sixty mutations may sound like a lot, but according to the international team of

geneticists behind the new research, it is actually fewer than expected. " We had

previously estimated that parents would contribute an average of 100 to 200

mistakes to their child, " Philip Awadella, a geneticist at the University of

Montreal who co-led the project, said in a press release. " Our genetic study,

the first of its kind, shows that actually much fewer mistakes, or mutations,

are made. "

That means human evolution happens more slowly than they previously thought.

The researchers analyzed the complete genetic sequences of two families that had

previously been collected as part of the 1,000 Genomes Project. They looked for

new mutations present in the children's DNA that were absent from their parents'

genomes. " Like very small needles in a very large haystack, " Awadalla said,

there was only one new mutation in every 100 million letters of DNA. [Read:How

to Speak Genetics]

The number of mutations that came from each parent was drastically different in

the two different families. In one family, 92 percent of the mutations in the

child's genes derived from the father, whereas in the other family, 64 percent

came from the mother.

" This was a surprise: many people expected that in all families, most mutations

would come from the father, due to the additional number of times that the

genome needs to be copied to make a sperm, as opposed to an egg, " said Matt

Hurles, of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in the U.K. More work must be

done to explain the disparity.

The new techniques and algorithms developed for the research, which is detailed

in the latest issue of Nature Genetics, can be used in the future to answer

additional questions. For example, how does a parent's age affect the number of

mutations passed to his or her offspring? How do their various environmental

exposures impact mutation rates?

Geneticists will find out by comparing the number of new mutations in children

born to parents of differing ages and life experiences.

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