Recognising the broad array of approaches available for the diagnosis of ancient tuberculosis: Comment on ‘Infectious diseases and Neolithic transformations’ (Fuchs et al. 2019 <i>The Holocene</i> 29: 1545–1557)
David E. Minnikin, Oona Y.-C. Lee, Houdini H.T. Wu, Gurdyal S. Besra, Helen D. Donoghue
The Holocene · 2020-01
Abstract
The characterisation of ancient tuberculosis is not totally dependent on the recovery of intact genomes. Judicious combinations of ancient DNA fragments and specific lipid biomarkers provide unambiguous diagnosis and these protocols are capable of refinement and extension. Currently, there is no direct evidence for exclusive co-evolution of humans and tuberculosis. A developing body of data suggests that the initial evolution of tuberculosis may readily have taken place in a range of Pleistocene megafauna.
MeSH terms
- Ancient DNA
- Megafauna
- Tuberculosis
- Pleistocene
- Holocene
- Paleontology
- Geology
- Range (aeronautics)
- Archaeology
- Biology
- Evolutionary biology
- History