Friday, March 28, 2025

 

A genetic tree as a movie: Moving beyond the still portrait of ancestry




University of Michigan




ANN ARBOR—University of Michigan researchers have developed a statistical method that can be used for such wide-ranging applications as tracing your ancestry, modeling disease spread and studying how animals spread through geographic regions.

One of the method's applications is to give a more complete sense of human ancestry, says Gideon Bradburd, U-M professor of ecology and evolutionary biology. For example, when you send your DNA off for a personalized ancestry report, the report you get back is only a very small view of your family tree pinned in a specific point and space in time. 

These types of genetic reports reflect the amount of a person's genome that they've inherited from individuals living in a specific area at a specific point in the past. If your ancestry report says that you're 50% Irish, that means you have a lot of second through fourth cousins who currently live in Ireland, says Bradburd. But in reality, your family tree is much more like a movie than this snapshot. 

The statistical method developed by Bradburd and fellow U-M researchers Michael Grundler and Jonathan Terhorst can give people a "movie" version of their ancestry, showing where their ancestors originated and how they moved across the globe. The method uses modern genetic sequence samples, estimates all of the locations of an individual's genetic ancestors, identifies the average location of those individuals based on assumptions about how people move, and tracks it back over centuries.

The researchers' method can be used for more than tracing human ancestry. It can also be used to track the emergence of viruses, the divergence of animal populations and other genealogical tracking. Their results are published in the journal Science.

"There's ways in which consumer ancestry reports are interesting, and certainly it's powerful to learn about your history, especially for folks who've been adopted or orphaned or are disconnected from their family," Bradburd said. "But there are other ways in which these ancestry reports can be really problematic. They really reify notions of the biological essentialism of race because they're presenting these categories of Irish, for example, as if they're ideals, that they're real and unchanging through time."

But researchers know this isn't the case. A field, forged by Nobel Prize-winning geneticist Svante Pääbo, developed the tools to genotype ancient DNA. This allows researchers to trace waves of human populations as they spread throughout the world—particularly in Eurasia, where most of this type of genetic sequencing has been happening, Bradburd says. This has allowed researchers to see how human groups enter and leave geographic regions through time.

"Because the genetic flavor of a location changes so much through time, we know it's meaningless to say, 'This is what it means to be Irish,'" Bradburd said. "It's not just that being 'genetically Irish' doesn't mean anything; it also means that you are everything."

Bradburd points to a thought experiment in human biology: imagine two biological parents and four biological grandparents. This doubles every generation, and it only has to double a relatively small number of generations before there are more people in that direct lineage than there have ever been humans alive on Earth.

This also means that you don't have to go very far back in time to discover that many people share many ancestors.

"Because our pedigrees explode so quickly, they also must collapse in the same sense that you and I must share many, many relatives at many points back in time, and that's true for every person alive on Earth," Bradburd said. "We're all extraordinarily closely related to each other."

The ancestry reports are accurate, Bradburd said, but specifically when they are tied to a time period. 

"The ancestry reports aren't wrong, but they're leaving out a very important component, which is the 'when' you have Irish ancestry," Bradburd said. "Because we know the modern human lineage arose in Africa, it is as accurate to say that you have 100% African ancestry at a deeper time horizon."

The statistical method, called Gaia (geographic ancestry inference algorithm), starts by making a very simple assumption about how individuals move: that typically they move locally. The method combines that assumption with the location of modern-day individuals and a genetic structure that relates them called the ancestral recombination graph.

With those two pieces of information and the simple model of how individuals move, the researchers can compute the "most parsimonious locations of ancestors," Bradburd says. The researchers then can propagate that information back through the past.

Bradburd's work is answering a call from the National Academy of Sciences, urging researchers working on human population genetics to move away from race-based labels. While the sociological realities of race are undeniable, racial categories do not make good predictions about genetic variation, he says.

Because of the disconnect between race and genetics, racial labels can often be imprecise: two people might share the same label, but be much more closely or less closely related to each other. In addition, because the genetics in a certain geographic area can shift so much over time, geographic and national labels can also be misleading, Bradburd says. 

"Saying you're 'genetically Irish' makes it seem like 'Irish' has always meant the same thing, and genetically we know that is not true and also that anyone who is Irish—meaning they inherited parts of their genome from people who lived in Ireland—is only Irish with respect to a specific time horizon," he said. "That these race labels gloss over both of these important pieces of information is a big loss of specificity and also poses a very real danger to the weaponization of science for political means."

The method Bradburd's team developed can be applied to systems other than human genetics. Researchers can use this method to look at the genetic distribution of the organisms they study. Researchers can also use this method to learn about the migration of organisms—human and otherwise, Bradburd says.

For example, researchers have been able to look at measures of genetic similarity of population between two locations and infer that they are more or less closely connected by migration, or more or less isolated from each other. But this tool allows researchers to pin a timeline on when these movements happened.

And this tool can apply in this case to more than tracing human genetics—it can be used to help determine when a disease might have emerged from a specific region of the world, for example. The U-M group is working with researchers in Australia to learn how mosquitoes colonized islands of the South Pacific, and with researchers in Michigan and Ohio to understand the history and dispersal of the Massasauga rattlesnake.

"It's one of the things I'm quite excited about with this—you can use this method to identify dispersal patterns through time and between specific locations," Bradburd said. "Notions of ancestry don't have to be static. Instead, you should think of them as being dynamic, and interesting and understandable more as a movie than as a picture."

 

Park entrances may be hotspots for infective dog roundworm eggs



New study could help inform efforts to reduce risk of spread among animals and to humans



PLOS

Park entrances may be hotspots for infective dog roundworm eggs 

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Whoopi the dog enjoying a Dublin park

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Credit: Paul Arnold




In an analysis of soil samples from twelve parks in Dublin, Ireland, park entrances were more heavily contaminated with infective roundworm eggs than any other tested park location. Jason Keegan of Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases.

Dogs and cats are often infected with parasitic roundworms in the Toxocara genus. Infected animals can release the roundworm eggs into the environment, and humans can become infected after accidental ingestion of the eggs. Many infected humans never experience symptoms, but some may experience mild or severe symptoms such as eye infection. Infection with Toxocara is one of the most widespread parasitic infections in the world.

While prior studies have shown that soils in public parks are commonly contaminated with Toxocara roundworm eggs, few have explored whether certain areas within parks are more contaminated than others. To address that question, Keegan and colleagues collected and analyzed soil samples from within 12 parks in Dublin, Ireland, focusing on park entrances, playgrounds, the sidelines of sports fields, and popular areas for sitting on grass.

The analysis showed that park entrances were more heavily contaminated with roundworm eggs than the other park locations. The second-most contaminated areas were playgrounds. Closer examination of the detected eggs found that most were potentially infective, and most were of the species Toxocara canis—the common dog roundworm.

On the basis of these findings, the researchers call for increased preventive efforts focused on encouraging dog owners to properly dispose of dog feces at park entrances and playgrounds. They note that the success of such efforts should be monitored with regular measurements of Toxocara eggs at these sites. They specifically designed the analytical method used for this study to be accessible and affordable, so it could serve as a standardized monitoring strategy, easing comparison between sites and over time.

The authors add: "Park entrances had the most Toxocara eggs, and most of these eggs likely came from dogs. By providing signage, bins and a means to clean up after your dog in these locations, we could reduce the level of contamination. That’s the next step in the research." 

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In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases: https://plos.io/3E7WEYK

Citation: Keegan JD, Airs PM, Brown C, Dingley AR, Courtney C, Morgan ER, et al. (2025) Park entrances, commonly contaminated with infective Toxocara canis eggs, present a risk of zoonotic infection and an opportunity for focused intervention. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 19(3): e0012917. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0012917

Author Countries: Ireland, United Kingdom

Funding: This research was funded by The Irish Research Council's Postdoctoral Fellowship programme (GOIPD/2020/510 to JDK and CVH). https://research.ie/ The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

 

Melting ice, more rain drive Southern Ocean cooling


Stanford researchers found increased meltwater and rain explain 60% of a decades-long mismatch between predicted and observed temperatures in the ocean around Antarctica


Stanford UniversityFacebook




In brief

  • Surface waters in the Southern Ocean have been cooling in recent decades, counter to what climate models predict.

  • Scientists have quantified how much of the cooling observed since 1990 has been driven by an influx of freshwater that’s unaccounted for in state-of-the-art climate models.

  • The researchers discovered that freshwater inputs along the coast from melting ice sheets exert surprisingly strong influence on Southern Ocean surface temperatures and the broader climate system.

 

Global climate models predict that the ocean around Antarctica should be warming, but in reality, those waters have cooled over most of the past four decades. 

The discrepancy between model results and observed cooling, Stanford University scientists have now found, comes down mainly to missing meltwater and underestimated rainfall. 

“We found that the Southern Ocean cooling trend is actually a response to global warming, which accelerates ice sheet melting and local precipitation,” said Earle Wilson, an assistant professor of Earth system science in the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability and senior author of the March 27 study in Geophysical Research Letters

As rising temperatures melt Antarctica’s ice sheet and cause more precipitation, the Southern Ocean’s upper layer is growing less salty – and thus, less dense. This creates a lid that limits the exchange of cool surface waters with warmer waters below. “The fresher you make that surface layer, the harder it is to mix warm water up,” Wilson explained.

But this freshening is not fully represented in state-of-the-art climate models – a flaw that scientists have long recognized as a major source of uncertainty in projections of future sea level rise. “The impact of glacial meltwater on ocean circulation is completely missing from most climate models,” Wilson said.

Reconciling global discrepancies 

The mismatch between observed and simulated sea surface temperatures around Antarctica is part of a larger challenge for scientists and governments seeking to prepare for climate impacts. Global climate models generally do not accurately simulate the cooling observed over the past 40 years in the Southern Ocean and the eastern Pacific around the equator or the intensity of the warming observed in the Indian and western Pacific Oceans. There is also a discrepancy between simulations and the observed frequency of La Niña weather conditions, defined by the eastern Pacific being colder than average. 

Warming events in the Southern Ocean over roughly the past eight years have somewhat diminished the 40-year-long cooling trend. But if sea surface temperature trends around the globe continue to resemble patterns that have emerged in recent decades, rather than shifting toward the patterns predicted in simulations, it would change scientists’ expectations for some near-term impacts from climate change. “Our results may help reconcile these global discrepancies,” Wilson said.

Oceans globally have absorbed more than a quarter of the carbon dioxide emitted by human activities and more than 90% of the excess heat trapped in our climate system by greenhouse gases. “The Southern Ocean is one of the primary places that happens,” said lead study author Zachary Kaufman, a postdoctoral scholar in Earth system science. 

As a result, the Southern Ocean has an outsized influence on global sea level rise, ocean heat uptake, and carbon sequestration. Its surface temperatures affect El Niño and La Niña weather patterns, which influence rainfall as far away as California.

A surprising discovery

To understand the physical mechanism for Southern Ocean cooling – and enable more reliable projections of its future impacts on Earth’s climate system – Wilson and Kaufman set out to determine how much sea surface temperatures around Antarctica in simulations have cooled in response to freshening. “We naively figured it wouldn’t matter exactly where you put the freshwater,” Wilson said. 

The researchers were surprised to discover that surface temperatures are much more sensitive to freshwater fluxes concentrated along the coast than those splashing more broadly across the ocean as rain. 

“Applying freshwater near the Antarctic margin has a bigger influence on sea ice formation and the seasonal cycle of sea ice extent, which then has downstream impacts on sea surface temperature,” Wilson said. “This was a surprising result that we are eager to explore further in future work.” 

Quantifying the effect of missing meltwater

Previous studies have sought to quantify how Antarctic meltwater affects the global climate system by adding some amount of freshwater to a single climate model simulation, in what scientists have dubbed “hosing” experiments. “You get very divergent results, because people set up their experiments slightly differently, and the models are a little different, and it’s unclear if these are really apples-to-apples comparisons,” Wilson explained. 

For the new study, the researchers sought to avoid this issue by working with a collection of simulations. Using a new ensemble of coupled climate and ocean models from the recently launched Southern Ocean Freshwater Input from Antarctica (SOFIA) Initiative, as well as an older set of models simulating ocean density and circulation changes, the authors analyzed how much simulated sea surface temperatures changed in response to the actual freshwater inputs between 1990 and 2021. 

“There’s been some debate over whether that meltwater is enough over the historical period to really matter,” said Kaufman. “We show that it does.”

With the new method, which incorporates simulations from 17 different climate models, the researchers found missing freshwater explains up to 60% of the mismatch in observed and predicted Southern Ocean surface temperatures between 1990 and 2021. 

“We’ve known for some time that ice sheet melting will impact ocean circulation over the next century and beyond,” Wilson said. “Our results provide new evidence that these meltwater trends are already altering ocean dynamics and possibly the global climate.”

 

Additional co-authors include Yuchen Li, an undergraduate student in the Physics Department in the Stanford School of Humanities and Sciences, Ariaan Purich of Monash University, and Rebecca Beadling of Temple University.

This research was supported by Stanford University, a grant from the NSF Division of Polar Programs, and the Australian Research Council Special Research Initiative for Securing Antarctica’s Environmental Future. Li was supported by the Sustainability, Engineering and Science – Undergraduate Research (SESUR) program in the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability.

 

Classroom talk plays a key part in the teaching of writing, study shows



University of Exeter





The way teachers manage classroom discussion with pupils plays a key role in the teaching of writing, a new study shows.

The research shows the importance of managing classroom discussion in a way that develops pupils’ understanding of the choices that writers make, and how those choices create particular effects for readers. This discussion helps pupils to think more about the choices that they make in their own writing.

The study reinforces the importance of dedicating time to discussion in secondary English lessons. It shows that time should be given to exploratory, speculative discussion that encourages students to share their initial impressions and ideas about the texts that they read.

Dr Ruth Newman, from the University of Exeter, observed classroom talk about writing – also referred to as ‘metalinguistic talk’ - in Year 9 classes as part of a three-year ESRC funded project.

The study highlights the importance of “scaffolding” discussion and making explicit the relationship between the language choices that writers make and the effect of those choices. Vague or clustered questioning may obscure meaning or scaffold insufficiently learners’ understandings and diminish the potential for dialogue.

Dr Newman said: “The study reinforces the importance of teachers finding space in lessons for everyone to respond to texts in a speculative and exploratory way. This can engage students’ interest and help them to build on what they already know about writing. This also gives teachers an opportunity to check students’ understandings”

“Carefully led, purposeful discussion helps pupils think about how writers make choices about language, and how these choices shape meaning”

Dr Newman said: “Managing this talk about writing is a highly skilled task. It requires careful handling and development of unanticipated responses. Students less eager or able to contribute might also need support and discursive scaffolds to access textual meaning and verbalise thinking.”

Dr Newman has been working closely with seven teachers in the South-West of England for three years. She observed their lessons, which were captured by a digital recorder worn by the teacher and a video recorder in the classroom.

Dr Newman also examined existing research for evidence of how talk about writing influences learners’ knowledge about language use and writing choices. This showed the importance of supporting teachers to develop classroom talk about writing through professional dialogue, reflection and collaboration.

The studies showed opportunities to engage in talk about language may have an impact on students’ ]learning about language use, and on their own writing.

Staff shortages exceed those for teachers in many Illinois public schools



University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, News Bureau
bruno_paul220128-lbs-13-m 

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Paul Bruno is a professor of education policy, organization and leadership at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

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Credit: Photo by L. Brian Stauffer.




 

Expanding access to anti-obesity medications delivers 13% return on investment for society



Schaeffer Center white paper finds broader use of treatments may prevent or delay chronic disease by years, providing significant societal benefits




University of Southern California

Additional Life Years From Expanded AOM Access 

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Figure shows the additional life years gained, relative to status quo, from expanding access to anti-obesity medication (AOM).

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Credit: USC Schaeffer Center




A new USC Schaeffer Center white paper finds expanded access to anti-obesity medications would lead to significant increases in life expectancy and disease-free years while generating a substantial societal return on investment, even after accounting for treatment costs.  

More than 4 in 10 U.S. adults have obesity, which is linked to increased risk of over 200 diseases — including heart disease, diabetes, cancer and dementia — and costs society $260 billion annually to treat. Highly effective new anti-obesity medications can be a powerful tool against chronic disease, but fewer than one-third of health insurers cover them amid concerns about upfront costs.

Expanding access to anti-obesity medications for all adults without diabetes who qualify would generate $10 trillion in social value by enabling people to live longer and healthier lives, Schaeffer Center researchers found. Further, the investment in expanded access would yield returns to society exceeding 13% annually, which is comparable to returns on early childhood education for disadvantaged children and nearly double the U.S. stock market’s returns this century — investments widely regarded as valuable.  

“While the costs of anti-obesity medications have grabbed headlines, our analysis shows why it’s important to consider the lifetime value of treatment. Expanding access will prevent or delay obesity-related comorbidities, resulting in improved quality and quantity of life for many Americans,” said Alison Sexton Ward, a research scientist at the Schaeffer Center and co-author of the study.  

The analysis comes as federal officials consider a proposal to expand Medicare and Medicaid coverage of anti-obesity medications — a move that, if adopted, could also encourage broader coverage among private insurers. The new study builds on a widely cited 2023 Schaeffer Center white paper that found Medicare coverage of these medications could result in as much as $175 billion in cost offsets to the program over the next decade by reducing demand for care.  

Expanded access generates value for more than just the sickest patients 

Schaeffer Center researchers leveraged an economic-demographic microsimulation model known as the Future Adult Model to project the lifetime trajectories of health, medical spending, treatment costs and other economic outcomes for adults 25 and older without diabetes who qualify for anti-obesity medication under clinical guidelines. These findings were broken down by age group, body mass index (BMI) and risk of developing diabetes. 

Although branded competition typically pushes down net prices of high-cost drugs even before cheaper generics arrive, the researchers conservatively assumed the net price of anti-obesity medication would remain constant before declining substantially when expected generic competition begins in 2032. The net price, which includes rebates and negotiated discounts, is estimated at about 55-65% below the list price and is consistent with net price estimates used by the Congressional Budget Office.  

Younger and healthier adults who qualify for the medications were found to benefit the most from expanded access, though all age groups would have longer lives and less time with diabetes. As many as 1.8 years would be added to the lives of adults starting treatment at ages 25 to 34, while they would have as much as 5.9 additional years without diabetes.

Researchers determined the social value of expanding access by weighing the value of longer, healthier lives and savings from reduced medical costs against treatment costs.

Because of the years gained in better health, the greatest social value comes from treating younger and heathier adults. For instance, treating a 25-year-old with low immediate risk of developing diabetes on average generates nearly 30% higher lifetime social value than treating a 35-year-old with similar risk.  

“Insurers often limit coverage of anti-obesity medications to sicker patients, such as those with prediabetes or diabetes, but our analysis shows they are likely missing out on a chance to prevent worse and more costly outcomes through early treatment,” said co-author Darius Lakdawalla, chief scientific officer at the Schaeffer Center and professor at the USC Mann School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences and the USC Price School of Public Policy.  

It's not just younger and healthier people. The lifetime net social value is positive for nearly every group the researchers analyzed.

Strong investment returns found across populations 

Researchers also estimated the annual return to society for each dollar invested in expanding access to anti-obesity medication, reflecting the long-term health and economic benefits of such treatments. 

Expanding access would broadly generate compelling rates of return across different groups of patients. This measurement, known as the internal rate of return (IRR), exceeded 13% for all subgroups with obesity (BMI of 30 or higher) over a 30-year period.  

“Expanding access to anti-obesity medication is probably the single most effective policy to improve Americans’ public health,” said co-author Dana Goldman, co-director of the Schaeffer Center and founding director of the USC Schaeffer Institute for Public Policy & Government Service. “The challenge will be to do it in a way that rewards innovators but keeps the public costs low."

Figure shows the additional life years spent without diabetes, relative to status quo, from expanding access to anti-obesity medication (AOM). 

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Figure shows the net social value, relative to the status quo, from expanding access to anti-obesity medication (AOM).

Credit

USC Schaeffer Center

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