You may be related to cavemen if you do this in the morning: study

The early cave dweller gets the worm.

People prone to early rising could have the Neanderthals to thank as a new study suggests that ancient genetic mutations could be responsible for modern-day sleep cycles.

A team of researchers from various American universities found that DNA passed down from two ancestral groups of modern-day humans — Neanderthals and Denisovans — may have been the progenitors of the morning person gene.

“This was really exciting to us, and not expected,” Tony Capra, a professor and co-director of the Biological and Medical Informatics program at the University of California, San Fransisco, told New Scientist.

“Neanderthals and Denisovans passed on DNA that increased our morningness, and this has been retained in modern human populations.”


Primitive caveman in the forest with spear
The African ancestors of modern-day humans likely migrated to Eurasia and were forced to genetically adapt to the different environment, according to researchers. Getty Images/iStockphoto

Past research has linked present-day biological benefits — fertility and immunity, for instance — to the genes of Neanderthals and Denisovans. In the recent study, published Thursday in Genome Biology and Evolution, researchers wondered if our circadian rhythms evolved from our distant ancestors in the same way.

Researchers noticed the genes that became more common over time were connected to the body’s circadian clock, the 24-hour cycle that dictates the behavioral, mental and physical changes internally, the New York Times reported.

The scientists compared the genomes of three Neanderthals and one Denisovan to that of thousands of present-day humans, specifically highlighting the 246 genes responsible for regulating the circadian clock.

Overall, they found more than 1,000 unique genetic mutations throughout the sample groups, identifying those that were specific to modern-day humans or our ancestors — particularly gene variants that pertained to the body’s internal clock. From there, scientists discovered a small number of variants shared between people living today and the Neanderthals and Denisovans.

Using data from the UK Biobank, which holds the genomes and health reporting of half a million British volunteers, the researchers discovered that people today with the same body clock variants as our primitive ancestors were considered to be early risers.

The scientists theorized that adaptations to environmental changes were to blame for the genetic mutations that turn humans into “morning people.”


Woman stretching in the morning in bed
The team of researchers discovered that nearly all of the self-identified morning people shared genetic mutations with their primitive ancestors. Getty Images/iStockphoto

While modern humans can trace their ancestry back approximately 300,000 years to Africa, they eventually migrated to Eurasia, in higher latitudes about 70,000 years ago, where the environment drastically varied from Africa’s with longer days in the summer and shorter days in the winter.

Then, interbreeding with Neanderthals and Denisovans, who settled in Eurasia long before the homo sapiens, helped spread an adaptive sleep gene that prompted them to wake with the sun.

“[This helps] other species like fruit flies adapt to higher latitudes where there is higher seasonal variation in light-dark cycles and ultraviolet exposure,” Capra told New Scientist. “We think it was the same case for Homo sapiens.”