作者
Kirsten I Bos, Verena J Schuenemann, G Brian Golding, Hernán A Burbano, Nicholas Waglechner, Brian K Coombes, Joseph B McPhee, Sharon N DeWitte, Matthias Meyer, Sarah Schmedes, James Wood, David JD Earn, D Ann Herring, Peter Bauer, Hendrik N Poinar, Johannes Krause
发表日期
2011/10/27
期刊
Nature
卷号
478
期号
7370
页码范围
506-510
出版商
Nature Publishing Group UK
简介
Technological advances in DNA recovery and sequencing have drastically expanded the scope of genetic analyses of ancient specimens to the extent that full genomic investigations are now feasible and are quickly becoming standard. This trend has important implications for infectious disease research because genomic data from ancient microbes may help to elucidate mechanisms of pathogen evolution and adaptation for emerging and re-emerging infections. Here we report a reconstructed ancient genome of Yersinia pestis at 30-fold average coverage from Black Death victims securely dated to episodes of pestilence-associated mortality in London, England, 1348–1350. Genetic architecture and phylogenetic analysis indicate that the ancient organism is ancestral to most extant strains and sits very close to the ancestral node of all Y. pestis commonly associated with human infection. Temporal estimates …
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