Phylogenetic Analysis of the Black Plague
Microbiology Article Review
The first successful sequencing of an ancient bacterial pathogen was reported in the October 27, 2011 issue of Nature (Bos et al., 2011). Samples of Yersinia pestis, otherwise known as the Black Death, the Black Plague, or the bubonic plague, were recovered from the teeth and bones of victims interred in a 14th century burial ground outside of London, England.
Y. pestis DNA was recovered from five teeth and the authors found a C. To T. damage pattern previously shown to be characteristic of endogenous ancient DNA. The recovered DNA fragment length averaged around 55.5 base pairs, which is also consistent with ancient DNA. These findings help to confirm the recovered samples had not been contaminated with extant strains of Y. pestis.
After validating the technical approach, which was a capture-based array method, the authors were faced with aligning the very short reads in order to compare gene locations in the ancient genome to extant Y. pestis strains. To limit complications...
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