University of Leicester
Browse

Ancient Mycobacterium leprae genome reveals medieval English red squirrels as animal leprosy host

Download (3.04 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-05-09, 10:02 authored by Christian Urban, Alette A Blom, Charlotte Avanzi, Kathleen Walker-Meikle, Alaine K Warren, Katie White-Iribhogbe, Ross Turle, Phil Marter, Heidi Dawson-Hobbis, Simon Roffey, Sarah A Inskip, Verena J Schuenemann

Leprosy, one of the oldest recorded diseases in human history, remains prevalent in Asia, Africa, and South America, with over 200,000 cases every year.1,2 Although ancient DNA (aDNA) approaches on the major causative agent, Mycobacterium leprae, have elucidated the disease’s evolutionary history,3,4,5 the role of animal hosts and interspecies transmission in the past remains unexplored. Research has uncovered relationships between medieval strains isolated from archaeological human remains and modern animal hosts such as the red squirrel in England.6,7 However, the time frame, distribution, and direction of transmissions remains unknown. Here, we studied 25 human and 12 squirrel samples from two archaeological sites in Winchester, a medieval English city well known for its leprosarium and connections to the fur trade. We reconstructed four medieval M. leprae genomes, including one from a red squirrel, at a 2.2-fold average coverage. Our analysis revealed a phylogenetic placement of all strains on branch 3 as well as a close relationship between the squirrel strain and one newly reconstructed medieval human strain. In particular, the medieval squirrel strain is more closely related to some medieval human strains from Winchester than to modern red squirrel strains from England, indicating a yet-undetected circulation of M. leprae in non-human hosts in the Middle Ages. Our study represents the first One Health approach for M. leprae in archaeology, which is centered around a medieval animal host strain, and highlights the future capability of such approaches to understand the disease’s zoonotic past and current potential.

Funding

This work was supported by the SERI-funded ERC Consolidator Grant “RESERVOIR” (grant no. MB23.00001 REF-1131-52105 to V.J.S.) and the University of Zurich’s University Research Priority Program “Evolution in Action: From Genomes to Ecosystems” (V.J.S. and C.U.). C.A. was supported by the Fondation Raoul Follereau and the Heiser Program of the New York Community Trust for Research in Leprosy (grant no. P21–000127, C.A.).

History

Author affiliation

College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities/Archaeology & Ancient History

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Current Biology

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0960-9822

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-05-09

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Sarah Inskip

Deposit date

2024-05-07

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC