Ancient Borrelia genomes document the evolutionary history of louse-borne relapsing fever.

Journal: Science (New York, N.Y.)
Published:
Abstract

Several bacterial pathogens have transitioned from tick-borne to louse-borne transmission, which often involves genome reduction and increasing virulence. However, the timing of such transitions remains unclear. We sequenced four ancient Borrelia recurrentis genomes, the agent of louse-borne relapsing fever, dating from 2300 to 600 years ago. We estimated the divergence from its closest tick-borne relative to 6000 to 4000 years ago, which suggests an emergence coinciding with human lifestyle changes such as the advent of wool-based textiles. Pan-genome analysis indicated that much of the evolution characteristic of B. recurrentis had occurred by ~2300 years ago, though further gene turnover, particularly in plasmid partitioning, persisted until ~1000 years ago. Our findings provide a direct genomic chronology of the evolution of this specialized vector-borne pathogen.

Authors
Pooja Swali, Thomas Booth, Cedric C Tan, Jesse Mccabe, Kyriaki Anastasiadou, Christopher Barrington, Matteo Borrini, Adelle Bricking, Jo Buckberry, Lindsey Büster, Rea Carlin, Alexandre Gilardet, Isabelle Glocke, Joel Irish, Monica Kelly, Megan King, Fiona Petchey, Jessica Peto, Marina Silva, Leo Speidel, Frankie Tait, Adelina Teoaca, Satu Valoriani, Mia Williams, Richard Madgwick, Graham Mullan, Linda Wilson, Kevin Cootes, Ian Armit, Maximiliano Gutierrez, Lucy Van Dorp, Pontus Skoglund
Relevant Conditions

Relapsing Fever