Human major infections: Tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-A paleopathological perspective of their evolution.

The key to evolution is reproduction. Pathogens can either kill the human host or can invade the host without causing death, thus ensuring their own survival, reproduction and spread. Tuberculosis, treponematoses and leprosy are widespread chronic infectious diseases whereby the host is not immediat...

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Main Authors: Maciej Henneberg, Kara Holloway-Kew, Teghan Lucas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243687
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spelling doaj-b9d0a2bee9734947817fc4237e00eeb12021-07-04T04:30:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01162e024368710.1371/journal.pone.0243687Human major infections: Tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-A paleopathological perspective of their evolution.Maciej HennebergKara Holloway-KewTeghan LucasThe key to evolution is reproduction. Pathogens can either kill the human host or can invade the host without causing death, thus ensuring their own survival, reproduction and spread. Tuberculosis, treponematoses and leprosy are widespread chronic infectious diseases whereby the host is not immediately killed. These diseases are examples of the co-evolution of host and pathogen. They can be well studied as the paleopathological record is extensive, spanning over 200 human generations. The paleopathology of each disease has been well documented in the form of published synthetic analyses recording each known case and case frequencies in the samples they were derived from. Here the data from these synthetic analyses were re-analysed to show changes in the prevalence of each disease over time. A total of 69,379 skeletons are included in this study. There was ultimately a decline in the prevalence of each disease over time, this decline was statistically significant (Chi-squared, p<0.001). A trend may start with the increase in the disease's prevalence before the prevalence declines, in tuberculosis the decline is monotonic. Increase in skeletal changes resulting from the respective diseases appears in the initial period of host-disease contact, followed by a decline resulting from co-adaptation that is mutually beneficial for the disease (spread and maintenance of pathogen) and host (less pathological reactions to the infection). Eventually either the host may become immune or tolerant, or the pathogen tends to be commensalic rather than parasitic.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243687
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maciej Henneberg
Kara Holloway-Kew
Teghan Lucas
spellingShingle Maciej Henneberg
Kara Holloway-Kew
Teghan Lucas
Human major infections: Tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-A paleopathological perspective of their evolution.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Maciej Henneberg
Kara Holloway-Kew
Teghan Lucas
author_sort Maciej Henneberg
title Human major infections: Tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-A paleopathological perspective of their evolution.
title_short Human major infections: Tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-A paleopathological perspective of their evolution.
title_full Human major infections: Tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-A paleopathological perspective of their evolution.
title_fullStr Human major infections: Tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-A paleopathological perspective of their evolution.
title_full_unstemmed Human major infections: Tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-A paleopathological perspective of their evolution.
title_sort human major infections: tuberculosis, treponematoses, leprosy-a paleopathological perspective of their evolution.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The key to evolution is reproduction. Pathogens can either kill the human host or can invade the host without causing death, thus ensuring their own survival, reproduction and spread. Tuberculosis, treponematoses and leprosy are widespread chronic infectious diseases whereby the host is not immediately killed. These diseases are examples of the co-evolution of host and pathogen. They can be well studied as the paleopathological record is extensive, spanning over 200 human generations. The paleopathology of each disease has been well documented in the form of published synthetic analyses recording each known case and case frequencies in the samples they were derived from. Here the data from these synthetic analyses were re-analysed to show changes in the prevalence of each disease over time. A total of 69,379 skeletons are included in this study. There was ultimately a decline in the prevalence of each disease over time, this decline was statistically significant (Chi-squared, p<0.001). A trend may start with the increase in the disease's prevalence before the prevalence declines, in tuberculosis the decline is monotonic. Increase in skeletal changes resulting from the respective diseases appears in the initial period of host-disease contact, followed by a decline resulting from co-adaptation that is mutually beneficial for the disease (spread and maintenance of pathogen) and host (less pathological reactions to the infection). Eventually either the host may become immune or tolerant, or the pathogen tends to be commensalic rather than parasitic.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243687
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