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Molecular Identification of Bacteria by Total Sequence Screening: Determining the Cause of Death in Ancient Human Subjects

Research of ancient pathogens in ancient human skeletons has been mainly carried out on the basis of one essential historical or archaeological observation, permitting specific pathogens to be targeted. Detection of ancient human pathogens without such evidence is more difficult, since the quantity...

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Autores principales: Thèves, Catherine, Senescau, Alice, Vanin, Stefano, Keyser, Christine, Ricaut, François Xavier, Alekseev, Anatoly N., Dabernat, Henri, Ludes, Bertrand, Fabre, Richard, Crubézy, Eric
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3135582/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21765907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021733
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author Thèves, Catherine
Senescau, Alice
Vanin, Stefano
Keyser, Christine
Ricaut, François Xavier
Alekseev, Anatoly N.
Dabernat, Henri
Ludes, Bertrand
Fabre, Richard
Crubézy, Eric
author_facet Thèves, Catherine
Senescau, Alice
Vanin, Stefano
Keyser, Christine
Ricaut, François Xavier
Alekseev, Anatoly N.
Dabernat, Henri
Ludes, Bertrand
Fabre, Richard
Crubézy, Eric
author_sort Thèves, Catherine
collection PubMed
description Research of ancient pathogens in ancient human skeletons has been mainly carried out on the basis of one essential historical or archaeological observation, permitting specific pathogens to be targeted. Detection of ancient human pathogens without such evidence is more difficult, since the quantity and quality of ancient DNA, as well as the environmental bacteria potentially present in the sample, limit the analyses possible. Using human lung tissue and/or teeth samples from burials in eastern Siberia, dating from the end of 17(th) to the 19(th) century, we propose a methodology that includes the: 1) amplification of all 16S rDNA gene sequences present in each sample; 2) identification of all bacterial DNA sequences with a degree of identity ≥95%, according to quality criteria; 3) identification and confirmation of bacterial pathogens by the amplification of the rpoB gene; and 4) establishment of authenticity criteria for ancient DNA. This study demonstrates that from teeth samples originating from ancient human subjects, we can realise: 1) the correct identification of bacterial molecular sequence signatures by quality criteria; 2) the separation of environmental and pathogenic bacterial 16S rDNA sequences; 3) the distribution of bacterial species for each subject and for each burial; and 4) the characterisation of bacteria specific to the permafrost. Moreover, we identified three pathogens in different teeth samples by 16S rDNA sequence amplification: Bordetella sp., Streptococcus pneumoniae and Shigella dysenteriae. We tested for the presence of these pathogens by amplifying the rpoB gene. For the first time, we confirmed sequences from Bordetella pertussis in the lungs of an ancient male Siberian subject, whose grave dated from the end of the 17(th) century to the early 18(th) century.
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spelling pubmed-31355822011-07-15 Molecular Identification of Bacteria by Total Sequence Screening: Determining the Cause of Death in Ancient Human Subjects Thèves, Catherine Senescau, Alice Vanin, Stefano Keyser, Christine Ricaut, François Xavier Alekseev, Anatoly N. Dabernat, Henri Ludes, Bertrand Fabre, Richard Crubézy, Eric PLoS One Research Article Research of ancient pathogens in ancient human skeletons has been mainly carried out on the basis of one essential historical or archaeological observation, permitting specific pathogens to be targeted. Detection of ancient human pathogens without such evidence is more difficult, since the quantity and quality of ancient DNA, as well as the environmental bacteria potentially present in the sample, limit the analyses possible. Using human lung tissue and/or teeth samples from burials in eastern Siberia, dating from the end of 17(th) to the 19(th) century, we propose a methodology that includes the: 1) amplification of all 16S rDNA gene sequences present in each sample; 2) identification of all bacterial DNA sequences with a degree of identity ≥95%, according to quality criteria; 3) identification and confirmation of bacterial pathogens by the amplification of the rpoB gene; and 4) establishment of authenticity criteria for ancient DNA. This study demonstrates that from teeth samples originating from ancient human subjects, we can realise: 1) the correct identification of bacterial molecular sequence signatures by quality criteria; 2) the separation of environmental and pathogenic bacterial 16S rDNA sequences; 3) the distribution of bacterial species for each subject and for each burial; and 4) the characterisation of bacteria specific to the permafrost. Moreover, we identified three pathogens in different teeth samples by 16S rDNA sequence amplification: Bordetella sp., Streptococcus pneumoniae and Shigella dysenteriae. We tested for the presence of these pathogens by amplifying the rpoB gene. For the first time, we confirmed sequences from Bordetella pertussis in the lungs of an ancient male Siberian subject, whose grave dated from the end of the 17(th) century to the early 18(th) century. Public Library of Science 2011-07-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3135582/ /pubmed/21765907 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021733 Text en Thèves et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thèves, Catherine
Senescau, Alice
Vanin, Stefano
Keyser, Christine
Ricaut, François Xavier
Alekseev, Anatoly N.
Dabernat, Henri
Ludes, Bertrand
Fabre, Richard
Crubézy, Eric
Molecular Identification of Bacteria by Total Sequence Screening: Determining the Cause of Death in Ancient Human Subjects
title Molecular Identification of Bacteria by Total Sequence Screening: Determining the Cause of Death in Ancient Human Subjects
title_full Molecular Identification of Bacteria by Total Sequence Screening: Determining the Cause of Death in Ancient Human Subjects
title_fullStr Molecular Identification of Bacteria by Total Sequence Screening: Determining the Cause of Death in Ancient Human Subjects
title_full_unstemmed Molecular Identification of Bacteria by Total Sequence Screening: Determining the Cause of Death in Ancient Human Subjects
title_short Molecular Identification of Bacteria by Total Sequence Screening: Determining the Cause of Death in Ancient Human Subjects
title_sort molecular identification of bacteria by total sequence screening: determining the cause of death in ancient human subjects
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3135582/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21765907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021733
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