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Digging deeper into the limits of ancient DNA research on syphilis
Authors:Tanya E von Hunnius  Dongya Yang  Barry Eng  John S Waye  Shelley R Saunders
Institution:aDepartment of Anthropology, McMaster University, CNH 524, 1280 Main St. W., Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8S 4L9;bDepartment of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, British Colombia, Canada V3B 8C8;cHamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario;dDepartment of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario
Abstract:The search for the origins of syphilis has a long history in the medical and anthropological literatures. If we know more about the emergence of the pathogen that causes the disease in humans we will understand its evolution through time and space as well as shed light on its current state in living populations. Ancient DNA techniques used to isolate Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum DNA from archaeological human specimens provide direct evidence of its existence in the past. However to date, only Kolman et al. (1999) have been successful in this endeavour, while other attempts have failed (e.g., Barnes and Thomas, 2006; Bouwman and Brown, 2005). Why has there been little success? This paper serves to compliment and add relevant information to Bouwman and Brown's and Barnes and Thomas' discussion concerning our inability to apply ancient DNA techniques to study venereal syphilis in past human populations.Our approach utilized 15 different human specimens from different geographies and different temporal periods: eight samples come from medically diagnosed individuals archived during the American Civil War period; six originate from the United Kingdom and predate 1492 with four of these samples having been previously analyzed by Bouwman and Brown and one sample comes from historic Canada. Human mitochondrial and amelogenin DNA, as well as several genes from the Treponema organism were analyzed revealing the relatively good preservation of human multi-copy and single copy DNA but not treponemal DNA. This study also incorporates a unique molecular experiment using rabbits infected with venereal syphilis to help illustrate that treponemal DNA disseminates to bone early during the first stages of infection but is not present in later stages of the disease using the techniques presented in this study.
Keywords:Ancient DNA  Syphilis  Treponemal DNA  Human bone  Rabbit bone  Paleopathology
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