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Pre-Columbian origins for North American anthrax

Disease introduction into the New World during colonial expansion is well documented and had a major impact on indigenous populations; however, few diseases have been associated with early human migrations into North America. During the late Pleistocene epoch, Asia and North America were joined by t...

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Published in:PloS one 2009-03, Vol.4 (3), p.e4813-e4813
Main Authors: Kenefic, Leo J, Pearson, Talima, Okinaka, Richard T, Schupp, James M, Wagner, David M, Hoffmaster, Alex R, Trim, Carla B, Trim, Carla P, Chung, Wai-Kwan, Beaudry, Jodi A, Jiang, Lingxia, Gajer, Pawel, Foster, Jeffrey T, Mead, James I, Ravel, Jacques, Keim, Paul
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c662t-267258ae44e19d57e4dc078bce9e4225e3b9e88fa68b619793b68c27b559857f3
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creator Kenefic, Leo J
Pearson, Talima
Okinaka, Richard T
Schupp, James M
Wagner, David M
Hoffmaster, Alex R
Trim, Carla B
Trim, Carla P
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Beaudry, Jodi A
Jiang, Lingxia
Gajer, Pawel
Foster, Jeffrey T
Mead, James I
Ravel, Jacques
Keim, Paul
description Disease introduction into the New World during colonial expansion is well documented and had a major impact on indigenous populations; however, few diseases have been associated with early human migrations into North America. During the late Pleistocene epoch, Asia and North America were joined by the Beringian Steppe ecosystem which allowed animals and humans to freely cross what would become a water barrier in the Holocene. Anthrax has clearly been shown to be dispersed by human commerce and trade in animal products contaminated with Bacillus anthracis spores. Humans appear to have brought B. anthracis to this area from Asia and then moved it further south as an ice-free corridor opened in central Canada approximately 13,000 ybp. In this study, we have defined the evolutionary history of Western North American (WNA) anthrax using 2,850 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 285 geographically diverse B. anthracis isolates. Phylogeography of the major WNA B. anthracis clone reveals ancestral populations in northern Canada with progressively derived populations to the south; the most recent ancestor of this clonal lineage is in Eurasia. Our phylogeographic patterns are consistent with B. anthracis arriving with humans via the Bering Land Bridge. This northern-origin hypothesis is highly consistent with our phylogeographic patterns and rates of SNP accumulation observed in current day B. anthracis isolates. Continent-wide dispersal of WNA B. anthracis likely required movement by later European colonizers, but the continent's first inhabitants may have seeded the initial North American populations.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0004813
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identifier ISSN: 1932-6203
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1932-6203
language eng
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source PubMed Central (Open Access); Publicly Available Content Database
subjects 20th century
Animal products
Animals
Anthrax
Anthrax - genetics
Bacillus anthracis
Bacillus anthracis - classification
Bacillus anthracis - genetics
Biological Evolution
Chromosomes
Dispersal
Dispersion
Epidemics
Evolutionary Biology/Microbial Evolution and Genomics
Genetics and Genomics/Genomics
Genetics and Genomics/Microbial Evolution and Genomics
Genome-Wide Association Study
Genomes
Genomics
Geography
Geospatial data
Holocene
Humans
Ice ages
Inhabitants
Land bridges
Microbiology/Microbial Evolution and Genomics
Migration
North America
Phylogenetics
Phylogeny
Pleistocene
Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
Populations
Single nucleotide polymorphisms
Single-nucleotide polymorphism
Spores
title Pre-Columbian origins for North American anthrax
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