Literature DB >> 17308811

Patterns of tuberculosis in the Americas: how can modern biomedicine inform the ancient past?

Alicia Kay Wilbur1, Jane Ellen Buikstra.   

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease that continues to take its toll on human lives. Paleopathological research indicates that it has been a significant cause of death among humans for at least five thousand years. Because of the devastating consequences to human health, social systems, and endangered primate species, TB has been the subject of many and varied research efforts throughout the world, efforts that are amassing an enormous amount of data concerning the causative agent Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Despite sequencing of the M. tuberculosis genome and numerous molecular epidemiological studies, many questions remain regarding the origin, evolution, and future co-evolutionary trajectory of M. tuberculosis and humans. Indeed, the origin of pre-Columbian New World TB has been and remains hotly debated, and resolution of this controversy will likely only come with integration of data and theory from multiple disciplines. In this paper, we discuss the pre-Columbian TB controversy, and then use research from biological and biomedical sciences to help inform paleopathological and archaeological studies of this ubiquitous disease that plagued our ancient forbears.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17308811     DOI: 10.1590/s0074-02762006001000011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz        ISSN: 0074-0276            Impact factor:   2.743


  4 in total

1.  Mycobacterium tuberculosis spoligotypes in Monterrey, Mexico.

Authors:  Carmen A Molina-Torres; Elisa Moreno-Torres; Jorge Ocampo-Candiani; Adrian Rendon; Kym Blackwood; Kristin Kremer; Nalin Rastogi; Oliverio Welsh; Lucio Vera-Cabrera
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2009-11-25       Impact factor: 5.948

Review 2.  Insights from paleomicrobiology into the indigenous peoples of pre-colonial America - a review.

Authors:  Millie I Darling; Helen D Donoghue
Journal:  Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 2.743

3.  Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex lipid virulence factors preserved in the 17,000-year-old skeleton of an extinct bison, Bison antiquus.

Authors:  Oona Y-C Lee; Houdini H T Wu; Helen D Donoghue; Mark Spigelman; Charles L Greenblatt; Ian D Bull; Bruce M Rothschild; Larry D Martin; David E Minnikin; Gurdyal S Besra
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-07-30       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Tuberculosis in post-contact Native Americans of Brazil: Paleopathological and paleogenetic evidence from the Tenetehara-Guajajara.

Authors:  Lucélia Guedes; Lauren Hubert Jaeger; Andersen Liryo; Claudia Rodrigues-Carvalho; Sheila Mendonça de Souza; Alena Mayo Iñiguez
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 3.240

  4 in total

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