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Tuberculosis on the north coast of Peru: skeletal and molecular paleopathology of late pre-Hispanic and postcontact mycobacterial disease
Authors:Haagen D Klaus  Alicia K Wilbur  Daniel H Temple  Jane E Buikstra  Anne C Stone  Marco Fernandez  Carlos Wester  Manuel E Tam
Institution:1. Behavioral Science Department, Mail Code 115, Utah Valley University, 800 West University Parkway, Orem, UT 84058, United States;2. Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnografía Hans Henrich Brüning de Lambayeque, Peru;3. Museo Nacional Sicán, Peru;4. University of Washington, National Primate Research Center, United States;5. Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Wilmington, United States;6. School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, United States;g Universidad Nacional de Trujillo, Peru
Abstract:This paper examines skeletal and ancient DNA evidence in the study of suspected tuberculosis infection in the late pre-Hispanic and Colonial-era Lambayeque Valley Complex, north coast Peru (A.D. 900–1750). We integrate information on macroscopic lesion characteristics and distribution, radiographic and CT scan imagery, and analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex rpoB and IS6110 ancient DNA (aDNA) sequences. Destructive lesions were observed in the vertebral bodies of three precontact indigenous adult males, one colonial adolescent female, and in the cranium of a Colonial-period subadult. Assessment of lesion morphology and distribution led us to consider multiple diseases, but tuberculosis represents the most likely diagnostic option in all individuals. DNA was poorly preserved in all samples, but an IS6110 sequence was amplified in one precontact individual consistent with macroscopic diagnosis. These findings expand the geographic and temporal extent of tuberculosis to the late pre-Hispanic and Colonial north coast of Peru to highlight potential synergisms between diet, settlement patterns, and the evolution of Andean tuberculosis before and after European conquest. Moreover, this study helps focus several key questions in Andean tuberculosis research, including possible reassessment of the presence of the IS6110 sequence in the pre-Columbian Americas. Methodological considerations include differential diagnosis – especially with incomplete skeletons – and limitations of aDNA studies underscoring an approach integrating macroscopic, radiographic, and molecular lines of evidence in the paleopathological investigation of one of humankind’s most devastating and destabilizing diseases.
Keywords:aDNA  Differential diagnosis  Diet  Lambayeque  Infectious disease
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