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Ancient bacterial genomes reveal a formerly unknown diversity ofTreponema pallidumstrains in early modern Europe

Authors :
Kati Salo
Päivi Onkamo
Natasha Arora
Verena J. Schuenemann
Sarah Inskip
Denise Kühnert
Aivar Kriiska
Markku Oinonen
Arthur Kocher
Kerttu Majander
Judith Neukamm
Marta Pla-Díaz
Martin Malve
Heiki Valk
Gülfirde Akgül
Saskia Pfrengle
L. du Plessis
Rachel Schats
Fernando González-Candelas
Johannes Krause
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

SummarySexually transmitted (venereal) syphilis marked European history with a devastating epidemic at the end of the 15thcentury, and is currently re-emerging globally. Together with non-venereal treponemal diseases, like bejel and yaws, found in subtropical and tropical regions, it poses a prevailing health threat worldwide. The origins and spread of treponemal diseases remain unresolved, including syphilis’ potential introduction into Europe from the Americas. Here, we present the first genetic data from archaeological human remains reflecting a previously unknown diversity ofTreponema pallidumin historical Europe. Our study demonstrates that a variety of strains related to both venereal syphilis and yaws were already present in Northern Europe in the early modern period. We also discovered a previously unknownT. pallidumlineage recovered as a sister group to yaws and bejel. These findings imply a more complex pattern of geographical prevalence and etiology of early treponemal epidemics than previously understood.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cb96c71ca4a762b5560b6b0cd49a4a3c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.06.09.142547