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   Distinct clones of Yersinia pestis caused the black death  
   
نویسنده haensch s. ,bianucci r. ,signoli m. ,rajerison m. ,schultz m. ,kacki s. ,vermunt m. ,weston d.a. ,hurst d. ,achtman m. ,carniel e. ,bramanti b.
منبع plos pathogens - 2010 - دوره : 6 - شماره : 10
چکیده    From ad 1347 to ad 1353,the black death killed tens of millions of people in europe,leaving misery and devastation in its wake,with successive epidemics ravaging the continent until the 18th century. the etiology of this disease has remained highly controversial,ranging from claims based on genetics and the historical descriptions of symptoms that it was caused by yersinia pestis to conclusions that it must have been caused by other pathogens. it has also been disputed whether plague had the same etiology in northern and southern europe. here we identified dna and protein signatures specific for y. pestis in human skeletons from mass graves in northern,central and southern europe that were associated archaeologically with the black death and subsequent resurgences. we confirm that y. pestis caused the black death and later epidemics on the entire european continent over the course of four centuries. furthermore,on the basis of 17 single nucleotide polymorphisms plus the absence of a deletion in glpd gene,our adna results identified two previously unknown but related clades of y. pestis associated with distinct medieval mass graves. these findings suggest that plague was imported to europe on two or more occasions,each following a distinct route. these two clades are ancestral to modern isolates of y. pestis biovars orientalis and medievalis. our results clarify the etiology of the black death and provide a paradigm for a detailed historical reconstruction of the infection routes followed by this disease. © 2010 haensch et al.
آدرس institute for anthropology,johannes gutenberg university,mainz, Germany, laboratory of criminalistic sciences,department of anatomy,pharmacology and legal medicine,university of turin,turin,italy,unité d'anthropologie bioculturelle,faculté de medecine,university of mediterranean-cnrs-efs,marseille, France, unité d'anthropologie bioculturelle,faculté de medecine,university of mediterranean-cnrs-efs,marseille,france,centre d'études préhistoire,antiquité,moyen-âge,umr 6130 cnrs-250 university of nice,valbonne, France, center for plague,institute pasteur de madagascar,world health organization collaborating,antananarivo, Madagascar, department of anatomy and embryology medical faculty,georg-august university,göttingen, Germany, inrap,villeneuve-d'ascq archaeological center,villeneuve-d'ascq,france,laboratoire d'anthropologie des populations du passé,université bordeaux 1,talence, France, department of monuments and archaeology,municipality of bergen op zoom,bergen op zoom, Netherlands, barge's anthropologica,department of anatomy and embryology,leiden university medical center,leiden,netherlands,division of archaeological sciences,university of bradford,bradford,west yorkshire,united kingdom,department of human evolution,max planck institute for evolutionary anthropology,leipzig, Germany, worcestershire historic environment and archaeology service,worcestershire county council,worcester, United Kingdom, environmental research institute,university college cork,cork, Ireland, yersinia research unit,institut pasteur,paris, France, institute for anthropology,johannes gutenberg university,mainz, Germany
 
     
   
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