Unité de Recherche sur les Maladies Infectieuses et Tropicales Emergentes, UMR CNRS, IRD, IFR, Faculté de médecine, Université de la Méditerranée, Marseille, France.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2011 Jul;145(3):489-94. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21510. Epub 2011 May 3.
Historical and anthropological data suggest that skeletons excavated from an 11th to 15th century mass grave in Bondy, France, may be those of victims of the Great Plague. Using high-throughput real-time PCR investigation of the dental pulp collected from 14 teeth from five such skeletons, we detected Bartonella quintana DNA in three individuals and Yersinia pestis DNA in two individuals. DNA from five other deadly pathogens was not found. Suicide PCR genotyping confirmed Y. pestis DNA belonging to the Orientalis biotype. One individual had co-infection. These data suggest a plague epidemic in a population already infected by the body louse-transmitted B. quintana or a body louse-driven transmission of the plague that drove a medieval epidemic in inland Europe.
历史和人类学数据表明,从法国邦迪(Bondy)挖掘的 11 至 15 世纪万人坑中的骨骼可能是那场大瘟疫的受害者。利用高通量实时 PCR 检测从五具此类骨骼中采集的 14 颗牙齿的牙髓,我们在三个人体中检测到了巴尔通体 quintana DNA,在两个人体中检测到了鼠疫耶尔森菌 DNA。未发现来自其他五种致命病原体的 DNA。自杀 PCR 基因分型证实,鼠疫耶尔森菌 DNA 属于东方生物型。有一个人存在合并感染。这些数据表明,在已经感染体虱传播的巴尔通体 quintana 的人群中爆发了一场鼠疫,或者是体虱驱动的鼠疫传播引发了欧洲内陆的一场中世纪疫情。