Ancient DNA of Egyptian mummies yield earliest evidence of malaria
Washington, Oct 24 ANI: A new study of the ancient DNA of two Egyptian mummies who died more than 3,500 years ago have provided clear evidence for the earliest known cases of malaria. According to a
report in Discovery
News, Pathologist
Andreas Nerlich and colleagues at the Academic Teaching
Hospital Munchen-Bogenhausen in
Munich,
Germany, studied 91 bone tissue samples from ancient Egyptian mummies and skeletons
dating from 3500 to 500 B.C. Using special techniques from molecular
biology, such as DNA amplification and gene sequencing, the researchers identified ancient DNA for the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum in tissues from two mummies. "We now know for sure that malaria was endemic in ancient
Egypt. This was only been speculated on the basis
reports by the 5th century B.C. Greek historian Herodotus and some very faint evidence from ancient Egyptian papyri," Nerlich told Discovery
News. The
capital of
Egypt around 1500 B.C.,
Thebes hosts a huge necropolis, which mostly contains the remains of upper class ancient Egyptians. "Both infected mummies were
adults and had some mild
signs of chronic anemia. Unfortunately, no further
information is available since they came from 'no name burials'," said Nerlich. However, the location of their tombs in the necropolis strongly suggests that they were of high class local descent," he added. The wealth of these
people did not provide them with
protection against
diseases. In a previous study, Nerlich and colleagues discovered that most
people buried at the site died between the ages of 20 and 30. Caused by four different kinds of parasites belonging to the Plasmodium
family - falciparum, malariae, ovale and vivax - malaria is transmitted to
humans through a bite from an infected female Anopheles mosquito. The ancient scourge, which has shaped
history by decimating invading armies and making
villages in the grip of the fever hard to colonize, still plagues
humanity. Nerlich and colleagues believe that their
work in identifying one of the earliest forms of the
disease may
help develop new
treatments. "We are now hopeful we can identify the 'precursor' of malaria pathogens," he said. According to anatomist and paleopathologist
Frank Ruhli, head of the
Swiss Mummy
Project at the
University of
Zurich, the discovery is important because it is "based on reliable molecular detection of pathogen ancient DNA." "This study adds new insights into the evolutionary prevalence of a
disease which still kills millions of
people worldwide. It also highlights again the enormous importance of ancient mummy
research for modern clinical
medicine," Ruhli told Discovery
News. ANI
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