1. An 8000 years old genome reveals the Neolithic origin of the zoonosis Brucella melitensis.
- Author
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L'Hôte, Louis, Light, Ian, Mattiangeli, Valeria, Teasdale, Matthew D., Halpin, Áine, Gourichon, Lionel, Key, Felix M., and Daly, Kevin G.
- Subjects
BRUCELLA melitensis ,ZOONOSES ,NEOLITHIC Period ,GENOMES ,ANIMAL development ,SHEEP ,RUMINANTS - Abstract
Brucella melitensis is a major livestock bacterial pathogen and zoonosis, causing disease and infection-related abortions in small ruminants and humans. A considerable burden to animal-based economies today, the presence of Brucella in Neolithic pastoral communities has been hypothesised but we lack direct genomic evidence thus far. We report a 3.45X B. melitensis genome preserved in an ~8000 year old sheep specimen from Menteşe Höyük, Northwest Türkiye, demonstrating that the pathogen had evolved and was circulating in Neolithic livestock. The genome is basal with respect to all known B. melitensis and allows the calibration of the B. melitensis speciation time from the primarily cattle-infecting B. abortus to approximately 9800 years Before Present (BP), coinciding with a period of consolidation and dispersal of livestock economies. We use the basal genome to timestamp evolutionary events in B. melitensis, including pseudogenization events linked to erythritol response, the supposed determinant of the pathogen's placental tropism in goats and sheep. Our data suggest that the development of herd management and multi-species livestock economies in the 11
th –9th millennium BP drove speciation and host adaptation of this zoonotic pathogen. Brucella melitensis is a zoonotic bacterial pathogen of livestock that can infect humans and causes brucellosis. Here, the authors sequence an ancient specimen of B. melitensis and show that the species emerged in the Neolithic period, around the time of development of animal management practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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