(Press-News.org) A research team led by Eske Willerslev, professor at the University of Copenhagen and the University of Cambridge, has recovered ancient DNA from 214 known human pathogens in prehistoric humans from Eurasia.
The study shows, among other things, that the earliest known evidence of zoonotic diseases – illnesses transmitted from animals to humans, like COVID in recent times – dates back to around 6,500 years ago, with such diseases becoming more widespread approximately 5,000 years ago. It is the largest study to date on the history of infectious diseases and has just been published in the scientific journal Nature.
The researchers analyzed DNA from over 1,300 prehistoric individuals, some up to 37,000 years old. The ancient bones and teeth have provided a unique insight into the development of diseases caused by bacteria, viruses, and parasites.
The results suggest that humans’ close cohabitation with domesticated animals – and large-scale migrations of pastoralist from the Pontic Steppe – played a decisive role in the spread of these diseases.
“We’ve long suspected that the transition to farming and animal husbandry opened the door to a new era of disease – now DNA shows us that it happened at least 6,500 years ago,” says Professor Eske Willerslev. “These infections didn’t just cause illness – they may have contributed to population collapse, migration, and genetic adaptation.”
Could have implications for future vaccines
The findings could be significant for the development of vaccines and for understanding how diseases arise and mutate over time.
“If we understand what happened in the past, it can help us prepare for the future, where many of the newly emerging infectious diseases are predicted to originate from animals,” says Associate Professor Martin Sikora, the study’s first author.
“Mutations that were successful in the past are likely to reappear. This knowledge is important for future vaccines, as it allows us to test whether current vaccines provide sufficient coverage or whether new ones need to be developed due to mutations,” adds Eske Willerslev.
The study was made possible by funding from the Lundbeck Foundation.
Read the study “The spatiotemporal distribution of human pathogens in ancient Eurasia”.
-------
World’s oldest trace of the plague
In the study, the researchers found 214 pathogens. A remarkable finding is the world’s oldest genetic trace of the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis, identified in a 5,500-year-old sample. The plague is estimated to have killed between one-quarter and one-half of Europe’s population during the Middle Ages.
END
Large-scale DNA study maps 37,000 years of disease history
A new study maps infectious diseases across millennia and offers new insight into how human-animal interactions permanently transformed our health landscape.
2025-07-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Results from largest review of its kind on antidepressant withdrawal symptoms
2025-07-09
The largest review of ‘gold standard’ antidepressant withdrawal studies to date has identified the type and incidence of symptoms experienced by people discontinuing antidepressants, finding most people do not experience severe withdrawal.
In a systematic review and meta-analysis of previous randomised controlled trials relating to antidepressant withdrawal, a team of researchers led by Imperial College London and King’s College London concluded that, while participants who stopped antidepressants did experience an average of one more symptom than those who continued or were taking ...
Twist to the M-ax(is): New twist platform opens path to quantum simulation of more exotic states of matter
2025-07-09
Twisted materials—known as moiré structures—have revolutionized modern physics, emerging as today's "alchemy" by creating entirely new phases of matter through simple geometric manipulation. The term "moiré" may sound familiar—it describes the strange rippling patterns you sometimes see when photographing striped shirts or screens; in physics, the same underlying principle applies at the atomic scale. Imagine taking two atomically thin sheets of either the same or different materials, stacking them up together, and rotating one layer slightly relative ...
Chang'e-6 samples unlock secrets of the Moon’s farside
2025-07-09
The Moon's near and far sides exhibit striking asymmetry—from topography and crustal thickness to volcanic activity—yet the origins of these differences long puzzled scientists. China's Chang'e-6 mission, launched on May 3, 2024, changed this by returning 1,935.3 grams of material from the lunar farside's South Pole–Aitken Basin (SPA), the Moon's largest, deepest, and oldest known impact structure, measuring 2,500 kilometers in diameter. The samples arrived on Earth on June 25, 2024.
Previous studies indicated that the SPA was formed by a colossal impact approximately 4.25 billion years ago, releasing energy greater than that of a trillion ...
Teaching lasers to self-correct in high-precision patterned laser micro-grooving
2025-07-09
In International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing, a new laser machining method that dynamically adapts its beam shape is proposed to fabricate microgrooves with complex, highly precise cross-sections—some with a root mean square error decreased to less than 0.5 μm when processing microgrooves with a width of 10 μm.
The technique, developed by researchers at the Southern University of Science and Technology (SUSTech) in Shenzhen, China, could advance the production of microfluidic devices, sensors, and heat dissipation systems by allowing for rapid and scalable manufacturing of custom microstructures.
Laser micromachining has long been constrained by the fundamental ...
EGFR-targeted therapy resistance in breast and head & neck cancers
2025-07-09
“By synthesizing current insights on both RTK and non-RTK mediated resistance against anti-EGFR therapies, this review aims to guide future research and improve therapeutic strategies for these cancers.”
BUFFALO, NY – July 9, 2025 – A new review was published in Volume 16 of Oncotarget on June 25, 2025, titled “Challenges and resistance mechanisms to EGFR targeted therapies in head and neck cancers and breast cancer: Insights into RTK dependent and independent mechanisms.”
Researchers from the University of Cincinnati and Cincinnati ...
JMIR Medical Informatics invites submissions on ambient AI scribes and AI-driven documentation technologies
2025-07-09
(Toronto, July 9, 2025) JMIR Publications invites submissions to a new theme issue titled “Ambient AI Scribes and AI-Driven Documentation Technologies” in its open access journal JMIR Medical Informatics. The premier, peer-reviewed journal is indexed in MEDLINE, PubMed, PubMed Central, DOAJ, Scopus, and the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE).
Recent developments in generative artificial intelligence (AI) offer a promising pathway for reducing long-standing administrative burdens for physicians and clinicians. Specifically, there is a rapidly evolving field of ambient AI ...
Global trends and cross-country inequalities of acute hepatitis E in the elderly, 1990–2021
2025-07-09
Background and Aims
Acute hepatitis E (AHE) in the elderly can lead to severe complications including liver failure and mortality, yet the epidemiological landscape remains poorly characterized. This study aimed to assess the burden, trends, and health inequalities of AHE among the elderly over the past three decades, and to further predict its changes by 2030.
Methods
Data on AHE in the elderly were obtained from the Global Burden of Disease 2021. The burden of AHE was analyzed by trends, decomposition, cross-country inequalities, and predictive analysis.
Results
In 2021, the global incidence and Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) for AHE among the elderly ...
New catalyst enables triple-efficiency decomposition of ammonia for clean hydrogen
2025-07-09
A research team led by Dr. Kee Young Koo from the Hydrogen Research Department at the Korea Institute of Energy Research (President: Yi Chang-Keun, hereafter referred to as KIER) has developed a novel and more cost-effective method for synthesizing ammonia decomposition catalysts. This new approach enables more efficient hydrogen production from ammonia and is expected to make a significant contribution to the realization of a hydrogen economy.
Composed of three hydrogen atoms and one nitrogen atom, ammonia has a high hydrogen content, ...
FAU Harbor Branch receives $1M grant to study gulf’s mesophotic coral habitats
2025-07-09
Mesophotic coral ecosystems (MCEs) are important coral ecosystems found between 30 and 150 meters deep in oceans worldwide including the Gulf of America. They support diverse marine life and important fisheries but remain poorly understood. Unlike shallow reefs, MCEs depend on nutrients from the deep ocean from upwelling or river plumes, like those from the Mississippi and Apalachicola rivers. These nutrient flows support growth of marine phytoplankton (i.e. tiny floating algae), which is an important source of organic matter (food) that sustains the corals and other marine species.
However, scientists have ...
WSU study provides detailed look at the declining groundwater in regional aquifer system
2025-07-09
PULLMAN, Wash. -- Groundwater is declining across Eastern Washington’s complex, interconnected aquifer system, as people draw on it for irrigation, drinking and other uses at a pace that threatens its sustainability, according to a new study by a Washington State University researcher.
In certain “hot spots” – such as the Odessa region and the Yakima Basin – the rates of decline are particularly significant, with groundwater levels dropping two to three feet a year or more.
The data is built ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Loneliness predicts poor mental and physical health outcomes
Keeping the photon in the dark
FDA-approved drugs could make nano-medicine safer, study finds
Many seafloor fish communities are retaining their individuality despite human impacts
Somali women’s perspectives on female genital mutilation and its abandonment
Structure of tick-borne virus revealed at atomic resolution for the first time
The robot will see you now
Stepping up the potential of wearables: predicting pediatric surgery complications
Prenatal and childhood lead exposure linked to faster memory decay in children
Medical needles in the hands of AI
Source criticism in school requires more than isolated interventions
Mount Sinai’s Andy Jagoda, MD, receives top honor from New York chapter of the American College of Emergency Physicians
Clinical trials reveal promising alternatives to highly toxic tuberculosis drug
Vanderbilt Health at forefront of improving head and neck surgery with fluorescence imaging to ‘light up’ nerves
Koalas spend only 1% of their life on the ground – but it’s killing them
Moon-Rice: Developing the perfect crop for space-bases
Forum with alcohol industry ties shows significant bias in reviews of health research
Underestimated sources of marine pollution
IPK research team unlocks potential of barley’s closest wild relative, Hordeum bulbosum
Study reveals the hidden benefits of weight loss on fat tissue
Gut microbes key to understanding how exercise boosts cancer immunity
Morning vs bedtime dosing and nocturnal blood pressure reduction in patients with hypertension
BMI in children before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic
Branching out: Tomato genes point to new medicines
Charité study analyzes 400 million years of enzyme evolution
Large-scale DNA study maps 37,000 years of disease history
Results from largest review of its kind on antidepressant withdrawal symptoms
Twist to the M-ax(is): New twist platform opens path to quantum simulation of more exotic states of matter
Chang'e-6 samples unlock secrets of the Moon’s farside
Teaching lasers to self-correct in high-precision patterned laser micro-grooving
[Press-News.org] Large-scale DNA study maps 37,000 years of disease historyA new study maps infectious diseases across millennia and offers new insight into how human-animal interactions permanently transformed our health landscape.