Genetics
Deep Genomic History and the Evolutionary Origins of Multiple Sclerosis Risk19, Dec 2025
15, Dec 2025
Alper Bülbül
19, Dec 2025
This research article demonstrates that the contemporary prevalence of multiple sclerosis (MS) in Northern Europe is primarily a consequence of a massive migration of steppe pastoralists into the continent approximately 5,000 years ago. By analyzing a vast dataset of 1,750 ancient genomes alongside modern biobank data, the authors identified that MS-associated risk variants—most notably the HLA-DRB1*15:01 allele—emerged in the Pontic-Caspian steppe and underwent positive selection. This selection was likely a pleiotropic byproduct of an adaptive immune response, where variants that once conferred survival advantages against zoonotic pathogens and infectious diseases in a pastoralist environment now predispose modern populations to autoimmune neuro-inflammation. The study ultimately concludes that the dramatic lifestyle shifts of the Bronze Age, including increased population density and animal domestication, fundamentally reshaped the European immunogenetic landscape, creating a historical "mismatch" that continues to influence disease susceptibility in the present day.
Read more15, Dec 2025
