SCI A set of ancient teeth unlock a bacterial secret about the bubonic plague

Melodi

Disaster Cat
A set of ancient teeth unlock a bacterial secret about the bubonic plague
By IKE SWETLITZ @ikeswetlitz JUNE 8, 2018
plague-burial-1600x900.jpg

In the Samara region of Russia, the double burial of a man and woman, whose teeth revealed that the bacteria causing bubonic plague is almost 1,000 years older than previously thought.
V.V. KONDRASHIN AND V.A. TSYBIN
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early 4,000 years ago, a woman and a man were buried together just east of the Volga River in modern-day Russia, with a secret locked away in the pulp of their teeth.

The bodies were uncovered just a few years ago, the teeth pulled and sent westward to the Max Planck Institute in Germany, where Maria Spyrou was working on a Ph.D. in paleogenetics. When she subjected the pulp to a bevy of genetic tests, she found something surprising: an ancestor of the bacteria responsible for the Black Death.

She published that finding Friday in Nature Communications, providing evidence that the bacteria has origins at least 800 years earlier than scientists had previously thought.

Spyrou’s finding gets at a larger scientific question, with implications for infectious diseases beyond plague: Where do diseases come from in the first place?

“Understanding how a disease emerges is something we don’t really know,” Spyrou said. “Of course, every disease has a different way, or might have a different way, [but] there are patterns there that might help us understand it in more global terms, perhaps.”

This could have implications for fighting infectious diseases — also for better understanding human history itself, she said.

The first known plague pandemic began in the mid-500s, well before the Black Death of the 14th century. The fact that plague-causing bacteria were circulating for thousands of years before that initial pandemic raises the question of whether there were other devastating outbreaks that historians have yet to uncover.

“Understanding the natural history of such diseases is really key to understanding our history,” Spyrou said.

The plague-causing Yersinia pestis bacteria lives in rodents. Fleas bite those rodents, and then bite humans, transmitting the bacteria.

Prior to the publication of this paper, scientists thought that the variety of Yersinia pestis that caused the Black Plague emerged around 1,000 BCE. That was the conclusion of a 2015 research paper by a different team.

But, according to that paper and a 2017 paper that Spyrou worked on, there were other varieties of plague-causing bacteria circulating millennia ago.

The previously discovered strains of bacteria were “not efficiently transmitted by the flea,” though, Spyrou said. They lacked key genetic characteristics, which were present in the bacteria that caused the Black Death.

The bacteria that Spyrou reported in her Friday paper, dating to about 3,800 years ago, do have such genetic characteristics, meaning plague-causing bacteria may have been growing in flea guts — and infecting humans — earlier than previously thought.

Francois Balloux, a professor at University College London who directs the UCL Genetics Institute, said that Spyrou’s research was well-conducted from a technical perspective, and that it was “cool,” though “a bit incremental.”

And plague is not just a historical phenomenon. The disease still exists today, from Madagascar to Mongolia to Arizona.

Spyrou said that studying plague across these different parts of the world might be the key to finding the origin of the disease. She recommends focusing on central Asia.

https://www.statnews.com/2018/06/08/bubonic-plague-bacteria-russia/
 

mzkitty

I give up.
I found a copy of "A Journal of the Plague Year" by Daniel Defoe. I didn't know I had it. Maybe my ex-roommate forgot it when she moved. It's a cumbersome read, and very disturbing. I got about half way through and had to put it aside. His descriptions of the disease would make you sick.

:(
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
The fact that it might have been around....nearly forever, is not surprising at all. The history I recall about it was that it was localized in a particular region of Asia not far from the Silk Route and that raiding/expanding Mongol activities caused the route to move further south through a particular valley/steppe region that had indigenous rodents infected with the plague bacteria much like ground squirrels are today here in the States.

Fleas were very common in the poor hygiene of the era and once they hitched a ride with the Silk Route caravans it was all over but for the crying and weeping. I suspect the same is true for many spreading diseases today. Locally isolated until something changed that exposed them to a larger pool of organisms to infect.....HUMANS and their domestic animals.....i.e. Lyme, Rocky Mountain Spotted fever, Malaria, etc., etc., etc., and once these things break out of their "bottles" they are nearly impossible to stuff back in again.

Word to the wise. If/when/should the REAL SHTF you had better be standing by for the worst PLAGUES in history to be cut lose. We will be hit from dozens of directions all at once.....it will not be pretty and those folks not ready and prepared will fall like flies left and right. It will make the Black Death of the Middle Ages look like a cake walk.
 

Meadowlark

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I found a copy of "A Journal of the Plague Year" by Daniel Defoe. I didn't know I had it. Maybe my ex-roommate forgot it when she moved. It's a cumbersome read, and very disturbing. I got about half way through and had to put it aside. His descriptions of the disease would make you sick.

:(
Second only to smallpox in horror and virulence.
 
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