New genetic line of blond hair discovered

MICHAEL FIELD/Fairfax NZ

BLOND BEAUTY: A Solomon Island boy displays his locks.

A new genetic line in blond hair has been discovered in an unlikely place - among the people of Melanesia in the Solomon Islands and Fiji.

The magazine Science reports today that scientists now realise that blond hair evolved independently at least twice in human history.

Around 10 per cent of Solomon Islanders had the blond gene, said study author Sean Myles, a geneticist at Nova Scotia Agricultural College in Truro, Canada.

Strikingly there was almost no variation in shades of blond hair.

"It looked pretty obvious to me that it was a real binary trait. You either had blond hair or you didn't," Myles told Science.

After testing 1209 Solomon Islanders scientists compared the entire genetic makeup of 43 blond and 42 dark-haired islanders.

The two groups, they found, had different versions of a crucial gene, TYRP1, one that coded for a protein involved in pigmentation. Switching one "letter" of genetic code - replacing a "C" with a "T" - meant the difference between dark hair and blond hair. A similar mutation creates blond mice by reducing the melanin content in their fur.

The gene was recessive, which meant that blonds inherited it from both parents.

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New genetic line of blond hair discovered

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