| Literature DB >> 27741281 |
Nadia Amanzougaghene1, Kosta Y Mumcuoglu2, Florence Fenollar1,3, Shir Alfi2, Gonca Yesilyurt2, Didier Raoult1,3, Oleg Mediannikov1,3.
Abstract
The human head louse, Pediculus humanus capitis, is subdivided into several significantly divergent mitochondrial haplogroups, each with particular geographical distributions. Historically, they are among the oldest human parasites, representing an excellent marker for tracking older events in human evolutionary history. In this study, ancient DNA analysis using real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), combined with conventional PCR, was applied to the remains of twenty-four ancient head lice and their eggs from the Roman period which were recovered from Israel. The lice and eggs were found in three combs, one of which was recovered from archaeological excavations in the Hatzeva area of the Judean desert, and two of which found in Moa, in the Arava region, close to the Dead Sea. Results show that the head lice remains dating approximately to 2,000 years old have a cytb haplogroup A, which is worldwide in distribution, and haplogroup B, which has thus far only been found in contemporary lice from America, Europe, Australia and, most recently, Africa. More specifically, this haplogroup B has a B36 haplotype, the most common among B haplogroups, and has been present in America for at least 4,000 years. The present findings confirm that clade B lice existed, at least in the Middle East, prior to contacts between Native Americans and Europeans. These results support a Middle Eastern origin for clade B followed by its introduction into the New World with the early peoples. Lastly, the presence of Acinetobacter baumannii DNA was demonstrated by qPCR and sequencing in four head lice remains belonging to clade A.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27741281 PMCID: PMC5065229 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Recovery of ancient human head lice from a two-sided louse comb belonging to the Roman period (A) recovered from the Judean desert and Arava regions of Israel. In the lower part, entire specimens (B and C), the head and thorax of a head louse (D) and a damaged non-operculated egg (E) can be seen.
Summary of ancient samples, DNA analyses and haplotypes assignment.
| Louse number (Lab code) | Part of lice amplified | PCR results | Haplogroup identity | Haplotype identity on the basis of partial cytb 270-bp | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12S (110-bp) | Cytb (80-bp) | Cytb (270-bp) | ||||
| Comb A | ||||||
| Romanic-HL1 | thorax /abdomen | + | + | + | B | Hap_B36 |
| Romanic-HL2 | thorax /abdomen | + | + | + | B | Hap_B36 |
| Romanic-HL3 | Thorax | + | + | + | B | Hap_B36 |
| Romanic-HL4 | Abdomen | + | + | + | B | Hap_B36 |
| Romanic-HL5 | Abdomen | + | + | + | B | Hap_B36 |
| Romanic-HL6 | Abdomen | + | + | + | B | Hap_B36 |
| Romanic-HN7 | non operculated egg | + | + | + | B | Hap_B36 |
| Romanic-HN8 | non operculated egg | + | + | + | B | Hap_B36 |
| Romanic-HN9 | operculated egg | NA | + | NA | B | — |
| Romanic-HN10 | operculated egg | + | + | NA | B | — |
| Comb B | ||||||
| Romanic-HL11 | entire male | + | + | + | A | Hap_A5 |
| Romanic-HL12 | entire nymph | + | + | + | A | Hap_A55 |
| Romanic-HL13 | leg/thorax/abdomen | + | + | + | A | Hap_A55 |
| Romanic-HL14 | thorax /abdomen | + | + | + | A | Hap_A5 |
| Romanic-HL15 | thorax /abdomen | + | + | + | A | Hap_A5 |
| Romanic-HL16 | thorax /abdomen | + | + | + | A | Hap_A5 |
| Romanic-HL17 | Thorax | + | + | + | A | Hap_A55 |
| Romanic-HL18 | Thorax | + | + | + | A | Hap_A5 |
| Romanic-HL19 | abdomen | + | + | + | A | Hap_A55 |
| Romanic-HL20 | abdomen | + | + | + | A | Hap_A5 |
| Romanic-HN21 | operculated egg | NA | + | NA | A* | — |
| Romanic-HN22 | non-operculated egg | + | + | + | A | Hap_A5 |
| Romanic-HN23 | non-operculated egg | + | + | NA | A* | — |
| Comb C | ||||||
| Romanic-HL24 | entire nymph | + | + | + | A | Hap_A56 |
| Total | 24 | 22/24 | 24/24 | 20/24 | 14(A)+10(B)/24 | 7(A5)+4(A55)+ 1(A56)+8(B36)/24 |
NA: not amplified
*- clades identified on the base of cytb qPCR product sequencing
Fig 2Cytb haplotype networks of contemporary and ancient human body and head lice.
Each circle area indicates a unique haplotype and variations in circle size are proportional to haplotype frequencies. Pie colors and sizes in circles represent the continents and the number of their sequence for a haplotype. The length of the links between nodes is proportional to mutational differences.
Fig 3Maximum-likelihood (ML) phylogram of contemporary and ancient haplotypes of Pediculus humanus based on the partial 272-bp cytb gene with Pediculus schaeffi (KC241883) and Pthirus pubis (EU219990) as outgroups.
Fig 4Acinetobacter baumannii from ancient head lice belonging to the Roman period.
a, Maximum-likelihood (ML) phylogenetic tree relationship based on 182-bp fragment rpoB gene of A. baumannii detected in ancient head lice was compared with the reference sequences strain, while Pseudomonas was used as an out group. Bootstrap values are indicated at the nodes. Bold indicates the taxonomic position of A. baumannii identified in this study. b, 182-bp of A. baumannii rpoB gene fragment sequenced from the four ancient head lice, exhibiting one mutation not present in the homologous gene sequence from its closest relative, the modern A. baumannii sequence in GenBank”.