Australian Centre for Ancient DNA, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia.
Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Nature and Science, Tsukuba, Japan.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2020 Nov 23;375(1812):20190578. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0578. Epub 2020 Oct 5.
While microbial communities in the human body (microbiota) are now commonly associated with health and disease in industrialised populations, we know very little about how these communities co-evolved and changed with humans throughout history and deep prehistory. We can now examine these communities by sequencing ancient DNA preserved within calcified dental plaque (calculus), providing insights into the origins of disease and their links to human history. Here, we examine ancient DNA preserved within dental calculus samples and their associations with two major cultural periods in Japan: the Jomon period hunter-gatherers approximately 3000 years before present (BP) and the Edo period agriculturalists 400-150 BP. We investigate how human oral microbiomes have changed in Japan through time and explore the presence of microorganisms associated with oral diseases (e.g. periodontal disease, dental caries) in ancient Japanese populations. Finally, we explore oral microbial strain diversity and its potential links to ancient demography in ancient Japan by performing phylogenomic analysis of a widely conserved oral species- oral taxon 439. This research represents, to our knowledge, the first study of ancient oral microbiomes from Japan and demonstrates that the analysis of ancient dental calculus can provide key information about the origin of non-infectious disease and its deep roots with human demography. This article is part of the theme issue 'Insights into health and disease from ancient biomolecules'.
虽然人体中的微生物群落(微生物组)现在通常与工业化人群的健康和疾病有关,但我们对这些群落如何在历史和远古时期与人类共同进化和变化知之甚少。我们现在可以通过对保存在钙化牙菌斑(牙垢)中的古代 DNA 进行测序来研究这些群落,从而深入了解疾病的起源及其与人类历史的联系。在这里,我们研究了保存在牙垢样本中的古代 DNA 及其与日本两个主要文化时期的关联:约 3000 年前的绳文时代狩猎采集者和 400-150 年前的江户时代农民。我们调查了日本人口口腔微生物组随时间的变化情况,并探讨了与口腔疾病(例如牙周病、龋齿)相关的微生物在古代日本人群中的存在情况。最后,我们通过对广泛存在的口腔物种——口腔分类群 439 进行系统发育基因组分析,探索了古代日本人口口腔微生物菌株多样性及其与古代人口统计学的潜在联系。这项研究代表了我们对日本古代口腔微生物组的首次研究,表明对古代牙垢的分析可以为非传染性疾病的起源及其与人类人口统计学的深厚渊源提供关键信息。本文是“从古代生物分子洞察健康与疾病”主题特刊的一部分。