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Pathogens and host immunity in the ancient human oral cavity.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Warinner, Christina 
Rodrigues, João F Matias 
Vyas, Rounak 
Trachsel, Christian 
Shved, Natallia 

Abstract

Calcified dental plaque (dental calculus) preserves for millennia and entraps biomolecules from all domains of life and viruses. We report the first, to our knowledge, high-resolution taxonomic and protein functional characterization of the ancient oral microbiome and demonstrate that the oral cavity has long served as a reservoir for bacteria implicated in both local and systemic disease. We characterize (i) the ancient oral microbiome in a diseased state, (ii) 40 opportunistic pathogens, (iii) ancient human-associated putative antibiotic resistance genes, (iv) a genome reconstruction of the periodontal pathogen Tannerella forsythia, (v) 239 bacterial and 43 human proteins, allowing confirmation of a long-term association between host immune factors, 'red complex' pathogens and periodontal disease, and (vi) DNA sequences matching dietary sources. Directly datable and nearly ubiquitous, dental calculus permits the simultaneous investigation of pathogen activity, host immunity and diet, thereby extending direct investigation of common diseases into the human evolutionary past.

Description

Keywords

Archaeology, Bacteroidetes, Base Sequence, Dental Calculus, Food Analysis, Genome, Bacterial, Germany, History, Medieval, Humans, Microbiota, Molecular Sequence Data, Mouth, Phylogeny, Proteome, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Journal Title

Nat Genet

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1061-4036
1546-1718

Volume Title

46

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC