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The Mutant Genes Behind the Black Death
Quanta Magazine ^ | 10/6/15 | Carrie Arnold

Posted on 10/09/2015 5:00:58 PM PDT by LibWhacker

The Mutant Genes Behind the Black Death

Only a few genetic changes were enough to turn an ordinary stomach bug into the bacteria responsible for the plague.

A scene from The Triumph of Death (1562), by Pieter Bruegel the Elder.

Pieter Bruegel the Elder

The Triumph of Death (1562), by Pieter Bruegel the Elder.

By: Carrie Arnold

October 6, 2015

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Each year, 4 million people visit Yosemite National Park in California. Most bring back photos, postcards and an occasional sunburn. But two unlucky visitors this summer got a very different souvenir. They got the plague.

This quintessential medieval disease, caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis and transmitted most often by fleabites, still surfaces in a handful of cases each year in the western United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Its historical record is far more macabre. The plague of Justinian from 541 to 543 decimated nearly half the population in the Mediterranean, while the Black Death of the Middle Ages killed one in every three Europeans.

Now researchers are beginning to reveal a surprising genetic history of the plague. A rash of discoveries show how just a small handful of genetic changes — an altered protein here, a mutated gene there — can transform a relatively innocuous stomach bug into a pandemic capable of killing off a large fraction of a continent.

CAPTION

Northwestern University

Wyndham Lathem identified the genetic changes responsible for the most virulent form of plague.

The most recent of these studies, published in June, found that the acquisition of a single gene named pla gave Y. pestis the ability to cause pneumonia, causing a form of plague so lethal that it kills essentially all of those infected who don’t receive antibiotics. In addition, it is also among the most infectious bacteria known. “Yersinia pestis is a pretty kick-ass pathogen,” said Paul Keim, a microbiologist at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. “A single bacterium can cause disease in mice. It’s hard to get much more virulent than that.”

The genetic makeover that led to the modern plague is thought to have occurred relatively recently in evolutionary history, anywhere from 1,500 to 20,000 years ago. But last month, a discovery was announced that could extend the history of the plague all the way back to a time before humans. George Poinar Jr., a biologist at Oregon State University in Corvallis, found that a 20-million-year-old flea encased in amber has a plague-like bacterium on its proboscis that could be an ancestor of Y. pestis. While a definitive identification of the bacterium hasn’t been made — and may not even be possible — an ancient ancestor of the Black Death could help reveal the earliest steps in a tortured evolutionary path, and perhaps help pinpoint at what point the most deadly changes occurred.

A Flea Ride

As long as there has been plague, there have been people trying to figure out where it came from. Plague appears in a boom-and-bust cycle, emerging suddenly to cause huge pandemics and then retreating, sometimes for hundreds of years. The abrupt eruption of death with no apparent cause tended to invite theories involving the supernatural.

The reality is nearly as remarkable. Recent genetic work has traced the plague’s evolutionary precursor back to the relatively harmless gastrointestinal pathogen Y. pseudotuberculosis, which only causes mild diarrhea. “Some people don’t even know they have it,” said Wyndham Lathem, a biologist at Northwestern University who has spent his career studying the plague bacterium. “Yersinia pestis can kill you in three days, and only a few changes were required to make this switch.”

Moreover, these changes did not occur very long ago. In several recent studies, researchers compared plague bacteria samples from two pandemics. The Y. pestis DNA recovered from London’s plague pits and from German graves dating from the plague of Justinian turned out to be largely the same. In addition, bacterial samples from modern plague victims around the world reveal very little variation. The findings indicate that Y. pestis hasn’t yet had time to accumulate lots of mutations. “Yersinia pestis is such a recent species that there’s not very much genetic diversity among plague strains, even the ones from historic graveyards,” said Joe Hinnebusch, a plague researcher at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. The bacteria’s murderous adaptations are only a few thousand years old.

This 20-million-year old amber cast of a flea may include an ancestor of the plague bacterium.

George Poinar, Jr., courtesy of Oregon State University

This 20-million-year old amber cast of a flea may include an ancestor of the plague bacterium.

But what are these adaptations? In 2004, an international team of researchers published the first full genetic sequence of the plague ancestor Y. pseudotuberculosis. When they compared it to Y. pestis, they found that most of the differences between the two were so-called neutral mutations, changes that did not alter the traits of Y. pestis.

Only a few minor changes stood out. The first was like giving Y. pestis an all-you-can-fly ticket on the bacterium’s favorite ride: the flea. Y. pseudotuberculosis can’t travel on fleas, making it much less infectious than its modern descendant. Hinnebusch showed why it can’t move this way: Y. pseudotuberculosis is deadly to fleas, causing a diarrhea that kills nearly half of them. Y. pestis, on the other hand, gives fleas only a mild illness.

To find out what in the bacteria was causing disease in the fleas, Hinnebusch and Iman Chouikha, a postdoc, chopped up Y. pseudotuberculosis into tiny pieces and fed them to fleas. Only fleas that consumed the bacterium’s protective coat became ill, so the poison had to be located there.

Further detective work published in 2014 in PNAS revealed that the culprit was a protein called urease. This protein is present in  Y. pseudotuberculosis, but a genetic mutation stops the Y. pestis bacterium from creating it. When Chouikha and Hinnebusch inserted a functional copy of the urease gene back into Y. pestis and fed these genetically engineered plague microbes to fleas, the tiny arthropods got sick just as they did when they ate pseudotuberculosis. “This shows how very minor changes can have a dramatic effect,” Hinnebusch said.

Clot Stopper

But fleas are only part of the story of the plague’s development. While Hinnebusch was working on urease, Lathem was examining another small genetic change that allowed the plague to defeat one of the body’s main defense mechanisms: blood clots.

When a flea bites into flesh, the body responds by clotting blood to prevent bleeding and promote healing. If a plague bacterium gets trapped in this clot, it can’t multiply and spread itself through its new host. Lathem showed that Y. pestis has a gene called pla that its ancestors lack. This gene encodes for a protein that helps to dissolve blood clots. Without a clot, the bacterium is free to spread to the nearest lymph node, where it makes billions of copies of itself.

Lathem’s work, which was published in Science, showed that pla is required for pneumonic plague, a form of plague that can be transmitted from person to person and can kill its host in under 24 hours. But Lathem didn’t know whether pla was the only factor necessary. He turned to several ancestral strains of Y. pestis that continue to circulate in rodents in the highlands of China and Central Asia, likely the ancestral home of the bacterium. These strains provided an intermediate version between Y. pseudotuberculosis and modern Y. pestis. More importantly, some of these particular strains lacked pla.

When Lathem and Daniel Zimbler, a postdoc, tested the pla-free ancestral strains, they found that these could not cause pneumonic plague. But when they added pla while keeping the rest of the DNA the same, the strains readily caused pneumonic plague. And when they removed pla from modern strains of Y. pestis, the bacteria lost their ability to cause pneumonia. Lathem, Zimbler and colleagues published their results this June in Nature Communications.

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“We found the very earliest state at which Yersinia pestis could cause respiratory disease. And as soon as it had pla, it could grow rapidly and cause pneumonia,” Lathem said.

Y. pestis didn’t just acquire pla; the bacterium also changed it. A chance mutation altered one amino acid in pla, which greatly increased its virulence by allowing the bacterium to penetrate more deeply into the body. Once there, it could make more copies of itself, making it more likely to be transmitted to another person, whether by coughing or by fleabite.

The findings change how researchers think about pneumonic plague. The ability to cause pneumonia was thought to have been a last-minute addition to the deadly repertoire of Y. pestis. Lathem’s work suggests that Y. pestis acquired pla, and thus the ability to cause pneumonia, very early. The mutation in pla happened later, transforming a bacterium capable of causing localized outbreaks of disease into the mass killer we know today.

“Our work is pointing to this mutation in pla as one of these Big Bang events in plague,” Lathem said. “It was already ready to cause severe pneumonia, and once it could cause invasive disease, everything could amplify.”

Plague continues to spread, although improvements in pest control, hygiene and antibiotics have dramatically decreased the size of outbreaks and the number of people who die from them. Yet the DNA of these bacteria carries the chilling reminder that the next major pandemic may be only a few mutations away.



TOPICS: History; Science
KEYWORDS: bacteria; black; blackdeath; bubonic; bubonicplague; carriearnold; cryptobiology; epidemics; flea; godsgravesglyphs; helixmakemineadouble; medieval; pandemics; plague; plagues; thesniffles; yersiniapestis
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1 posted on 10/09/2015 5:00:58 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

Very interesting. Thanks for posting.


2 posted on 10/09/2015 5:06:55 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: onedoug

Ring around the rosey,
a pocket full of poseys
ashes, ashes, we all fall down.

Kind of sends a shiver down your spine when you
know where it comes from...


3 posted on 10/09/2015 5:15:03 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: LibWhacker


4 posted on 10/09/2015 5:29:42 PM PDT by JoeProBono (SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED;-{)
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To: tet68

“Here comes a candle to light you to bed
Here comes a chopper to chop off your head
Chip chop chip chop - the last man’s dead.”


5 posted on 10/09/2015 5:31:59 PM PDT by QBFimi (/...o.o/.o...ooo/...o.o...o/ooo/...o.o/.o/ooo.//o..o./. o.)
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To: tet68
Gets even worse when you think about it. Down fall of the Mongols Empire, The final nail in the coffin of Byzantium, the rise of Timur the Lame.
6 posted on 10/09/2015 5:37:53 PM PDT by Little Bill (EVICT Queen Jean)
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To: Little Bill

In a similar vein, it was hypothesized that the terrible influenza epidemic that hit the world right after WWI was incubated in large part by the discovery of ASPIRIN. - After the war, soldiers returned to their homes carrying the new discovery - the miracle medicine - aspirin. - Theory was that aspirin brought fever down; and fever was what zapped the virus at just the right time to render it harmless. - So, a temperature was our friend.


7 posted on 10/09/2015 6:06:54 PM PDT by Twinkie (John 3:16)
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To: JoeProBono

They filled the “beak” with aromatic herbs and scented flowers. They thought the disease was spread by “foul miasmas” and that this would block it and protect them.


8 posted on 10/09/2015 6:22:43 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: tet68

Historians dispute that nursery rhyme came from memories of the Black Death.


9 posted on 10/09/2015 7:06:21 PM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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To: Twinkie

The Spanish Flu started during WWI, not after it.


10 posted on 10/09/2015 7:07:17 PM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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To: SoCal Pubbie

Historians will dispute anything if it means more grant money.


11 posted on 10/09/2015 10:58:59 PM PDT by Darth Reardon (Is it any wonder I'm not the president?)
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To: Darth Reardon

Or when they find the same rhyme appears in documents before the period.


12 posted on 10/09/2015 11:25:44 PM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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To: Twinkie
In a similar vein, it was hypothesized that the terrible influenza epidemic that hit the world right after WWI was incubated in large part by the discovery of ASPIRIN. - After the war, soldiers returned to their homes carrying the new discovery - the miracle medicine - aspirin. - Theory was that aspirin brought fever down; and fever was what zapped the virus at just the right time to render it harmless. - So, a temperature was our friend.

Fevers do not kill completely the virus and does not necessarily render it harmless, but supposedly can lower the amounts of virus in a sick person's body, because viruses replicate less efficiently in higher temperatures. Fever is also thought to help immune responses work better but I do not think that mechanism or how it may affect disease transmission is clearly understood.

The 1917-1918 Flu Pandemic that started during WWI, not after, was so virulent and so deadly however, that I doubt that fever reduction by using aspirin would have made much of a difference. For one thing, remember also that influenza is transmittable even during the early stages when a person is only beginning to have symptoms and often before developing a fever. Also the Spanish Flu was unlike most other strains of influenza in that it was most deadly among young adults (aged 20 to 40) as opposed to the very young, the elderly and those with pre-existing illnesses. And those who died from it, many died within days of first showing any symptoms.

http://www.livescience.com/42763-reducing-fever-kills-others.html

http://science.howstuffworks.com/life/cellular-microscopic/question45.htm

However, prolonged high fevers also can very dangerous and kill. One reason is because it causes dehydration. Dehydration can cause dangerous amounts of mucus to build up in the lungs and can lead to kidney failure. And yes, the old “Feed A Cold But Starve A Fever” advise is wrong.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/fact-or-fiction-feed-a-cold/

Aspirin is thought to have caused some deaths during the Spanish Flu epidemic but not because it reduced fever but because some people overdosed themselves with way too much aspirin.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/13/health/13aspirin.html

http://www.doctorsreview.com/history/nov05-history/

13 posted on 10/10/2015 12:03:32 AM PDT by MD Expat in PA
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To: JoeProBono

14 posted on 10/10/2015 12:16:24 AM PDT by Daffynition (*We are not descended from fearful men*)
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To: LibWhacker

15 posted on 10/10/2015 12:27:53 AM PDT by Daffynition (*We are not descended from fearful men*)
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To: Daffynition


16 posted on 10/10/2015 1:34:54 AM PDT by JoeProBono (SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED;-{)
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To: JoeProBono

17 posted on 10/10/2015 1:50:51 AM PDT by Daffynition (*We are not descended from fearful men*)
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To: LibWhacker

This gene may well have made my arrival possible *and* may be responsible for me to never having gotten the runs while eating Army chow! ROTFL


18 posted on 10/10/2015 4:44:55 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Obamanomics:Trickle Up Poverty)
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To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Thanks LibWhacker. Good one for the Digest ping.
[caption] This 20-million-year old amber cast of a flea may include an ancestor of the plague bacterium.

19 posted on 10/10/2015 10:58:39 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Here's to the day the forensics people scrape what's left of Putin off the ceiling of his limo.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Veddy intedesting!


20 posted on 10/10/2015 11:25:19 AM PDT by Monkey Face (Obama voters are the reason we have to put directions on shampoo bottles.)
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