PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Research uncovers historical rise, fall and re-emergence of plague strains

2014-01-28
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Eric Dieterle
eric.dieterle@nau.edu
928-523-9230
Northern Arizona University
Research uncovers historical rise, fall and re-emergence of plague strains One branch of a deadly pathogen's family tree may have ended centuries ago, but from its ancient traces researchers can read a lineage with links to the modern world.

An international team of scientists has discovered that two of the world's most devastating pandemics—the plague of Justinian and the Black Death, each responsible for killing as many as half the people in Europe—were caused by distinct strains of the same pathogen.

The strain that helped bring an end to the Roman Empire faded out on its own about 1,500 years ago. But the other, which flourished 800 years later, led to worldwide re-emergence in the late 1800s and is still with us today, killing thousands each year.

The findings suggest a new strain of bubonic plague could emerge again in humans in the future.

"This is the oldest bacterial genome ever produced," said Dave Wagner, an associate professor in the Center for Microbial Genetics and Genomics at Northern Arizona University. "We were able to go back in time and find something that went extinct."

Wagner said the Justinian strain, which earlier research traced to having its origins in Asia, lies "smack between" two groups that are still found in China. "So that's pretty interesting that it moved all the way to Europe and went extinct. It could still be out there somewhere between Europe and China but we haven't seen it yet."

The plague of Justinian struck in the sixth century and is estimated to have killed between 30 million and 50 million people— virtually half the world's population as it spread across Asia, North Africa, Arabia and Europe. The Black Death struck about 800 years later with similar force, killing 50 million Europeans between just 1347 and 1351 alone.

Researchers from NAU provided the overall plague expertise on the project, while those in the lab at McMaster University in Canada sequenced minuscule plague DNA fragments from the 1,500-year-old teeth of two victims of the Justinian plague, buried in Bavaria, Germany. The University of Sydney contributed expertise on the pathogen's molecular clock—a method used to infer when different events in the evolutionary history of a species have taken place. And colleagues from several institutions in Munich, Germany—including the State Collection for Anthropology and Paleoanatomy and the Bundeswehr Institute for Microbiology—provided the samples.

The team reconstructed the genome of the oldest strain of Yersinia pestis, the bacterium responsible for the bubonic plague, and compared it to a database of genomes of more than one hundred contemporary strains.

The results are currently published in the online edition of The Lancet Infectious Diseases. They show the strain responsible for the Justinian outbreak was an evolutionary 'dead-end' and distinct from strains involved later in the Black Death and other plague pandemics that would follow.

"The research is both fascinating and perplexing, it generates new questions which need to be explored," said Hendrik Poinar, associate professor and director of the McMaster Ancient DNA Centre and an investigator with the Michael G. DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease Research. "For example, why did this pandemic, which killed somewhere between 50 and 100 million people, die out?"

The third pandemic, which spread from Hong Kong across the globe—including all the way to Arizona—is likely a descendant of the Black Death strain and thus was much more successful in evolutionary terms than the one responsible for the Justinian plague.

Although the rise and fall of the Justinian plague suggests that a similar emergence could happen again with a new strain, other factors render the scenario unlikely, Wagner said.

"We don't think we're going to see new large-scale plague pandemics. Not because the organism has changed—it's just as deadly as it always was—but humans have changed," Wagner said. Improvements in hygiene, particularly the limiting of rat populations in cities, and the emergence of antibiotics would limit the effective spread of the pathogen.

The samples used in the latest research were taken from two victims of the Justinian plague, buried in a gravesite in a small cemetery in the German town of Aschheim. Scientists believe the victims died in the latter stages of the epidemic when it had reached southern Bavaria.

The skeletal remains yielded important clues and raised more questions.

Researchers now believe the Justinian Y. pestis strain originated in Asia, not in Africa as originally thought. But they could not establish a 'molecular clock' so its evolutionary time-scale remains elusive.

This suggests that earlier epidemics, such as the Plague of Athens (430 BC) and the Antonine Plague (165 -180 AD), could also be separate, independent emergences of related Y. pestis strains into humans.

Our response to modern infectious diseases is a direct outcome of lessons learned from ancestral pandemics, say the researchers.

"This study raises intriguing questions about why a pathogen that was both so successful and so deadly died out," said Edward Holmes, an NHMRC Australia Fellow at the University of Sydney. "One testable possibility is that human populations evolved to become less susceptible,"

Wagner said another possibility is that "changes in the climate became less suitable for the plague bacterium to survive in the wild, or there was a lack of suitable rodent reservoirs."

Paul Keim, a Regents' Professor and the Cowden Endowed Chair of Microbiology at NAU said that "Plague has been circulating through civilization for at least 1500 years and characterizing this ancient genome allows us to understand how diseases arise and then spread from continent to continent - even to locations in Arizona."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New studies needed to predict how marine organisms may adapt to the future's acidic oceans

2014-01-28
SAN FRANCISCO, January 27, 2014 -- The world's oceans are becoming more acidic, changing in a way that hasn't happened for millions of years. But will marine organisms ...

Brain regions thought to be uniquely human share many similarities with monkeys

2014-01-28
New research suggests a surprising degree of similarity in the organization of regions of the brain that control language and complex thought processes in humans and monkeys. The study, publishing ...

H.M.'s brain yields new evidence

2014-01-28
During his lifetime, Henry G. Molaison (H.M.) was the best-known and possibly the most-studied patient of modern neuroscience. Now, thanks to the postmortem ...

What makes us human?: Unique brain area linked to higher cognitive powers

2014-01-28
Oxford University researchers have identified an area of the human brain that appears unlike anything in the brains of some of our closest relatives. The brain ...

UH researchers create new flexible, transparent conductor

2014-01-28
University of Houston researchers have developed a new stretchable and transparent electrical conductor, bringing the potential for ...

Converting adult human cells to hair-follicle-generating stem cells

2014-01-28
PHILADELPHIA - If the content of many a situation comedy, not to mention late-night TV advertisements, is to be believed, there's ...

Fertilizer nutrient imbalance to limit food production in Africa

2014-01-28
Underuse of phosphorus-based fertilizers in Africa currently contributes to a growing yield gap—the difference between how much crops could produce in ideal circumstances ...

New operating principle of potassium channels discovered

2014-01-28
Neurons transmit information with the help of special channels that allow the passage of potassium ions. Defective potassium channels play a role in epilepsy and depression. The scientists working with Prof. Henning ...

'Natural' engineering offers solution against future flooding

2014-01-28
Back-to-nature flood schemes which use the land's natural defences to slow river flow and reduce flooding could be a cost-effective way of tackling one of the biggest problems facing the ...

23andMe helps identify 11 new genetic associations for asthma-with-hay fever

2014-01-28
Mountain View, Calif. –January 28, 2014 ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The puberty talk: Parents split on right age to talk about body changes with kids

Tusi (a mixture of ketamine and other drugs) is on the rise among NYC nightclub attendees

Father’s mental health can impact children for years

Scientists can tell healthy and cancerous cells apart by how they move

Male athletes need higher BMI to define overweight or obesity

How thoughts influence what the eyes see

Unlocking the genetic basis of adaptive evolution: study reveals complex chromosomal rearrangements in a stick insect

Research Spotlight: Using artificial intelligence to reveal the neural dynamics of human conversation

Could opioid laws help curb domestic violence? New USF research says yes

NPS Applied Math Professor Wei Kang named 2025 SIAM Fellow

Scientists identify agent of transformation in protein blobs that morph from liquid to solid

Throwing a ‘spanner in the works’ of our cells’ machinery could help fight cancer, fatty liver disease… and hair loss

Research identifies key enzyme target to fight deadly brain cancers

New study unveils volcanic history and clues to ancient life on Mars

Monell Center study identifies GLP-1 therapies as a possible treatment for rare genetic disorder Bardet-Biedl syndrome

Scientists probe the mystery of Titan’s missing deltas

Q&A: What makes an ‘accidental dictator’ in the workplace?

Lehigh University water scientist Arup K. SenGupta honored with ASCE Freese Award and Lecture

Study highlights gaps in firearm suicide prevention among women

People with medical debt five times more likely to not receive mental health care treatment

Hydronidone for the treatment of liver fibrosis associated with chronic hepatitis B

Rise in claim denial rates for cancer-related advanced genetic testing

Legalizing youth-friendly cannabis edibles and extracts and adolescent cannabis use

Medical debt and forgone mental health care due to cost among adults

Colder temperatures increase gastroenteritis risk in Rohingya refugee camps

Acyclovir-induced nephrotoxicity: Protective potential of N-acetylcysteine

Inhibition of cyclooxygenase-2 upregulates the nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 signaling pathway to mitigate hepatocyte ferroptosis in chronic liver injury

AERA announces winners of the 2025 Palmer O. Johnson Memorial Award

Mapping minds: The neural fingerprint of team flow dynamics

Patients support AI as radiologist backup in screening mammography

[Press-News.org] Research uncovers historical rise, fall and re-emergence of plague strains