Raele Donato Antonio, Panzarino Ginevra, Sarcinelli Giuseppe, Cafiero Maria Assunta, Maria Tunzi Anna, Dellù Elena
Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale della Puglia e della Basilicata, 71121 Foggia, Italy.
Departament de Prehistòria i Arqueologia, Universitat de Valéncia, 46003 Valencia, Spain.
Pathogens. 2021 Oct 20;10(11):1354. doi: 10.3390/pathogens10111354.
The Abbey of San Leonardo in Siponto (Apulia, Southern Italy) was an important religious and medical center during the Middle Ages. It was a crossroads for pilgrims heading along the Via Francigena to the Sanctuary of Monte Sant'Angelo and for merchants passing through the harbor of Manfredonia. A recent excavation of Soprintendenza Archeologica della Puglia investigated a portion of the related cemetery, confirming its chronology to be between the end of the 13th and beginning of the 14th century. Two single graves preserved individuals accompanied by numerous coins dating back to the 14th century, hidden in clothes and in a bag tied to the waist. The human remains of the individuals were analyzed in the Laboratorio di Antropologia Fisica of Soprintendenza ABAP della città metropolitana di Bari. Three teeth from each individual were collected and sent to the Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale di Puglia e Basilicata to study infectious diseases such as malaria, plague, tuberculosis, epidemic typhus and Maltese fever (Brucellosis), potentially related to the lack of inspection of the bodies during burial procedures. DNA extracted from six collected teeth and two additional unrelated human teeth (negative controls) were analyzed using PCR to verify the presence of human DNA (β-globulin) and of pathogens such as spp., , spp., spp. and spp. The nucleotide sequence of the amplicon was determined to confirm the results. Human DNA was successfully amplified from all eight dental extracts and two different genes of were amplified and sequenced in 4 out of the 6 teeth. Molecular analyses ascertained that the individuals buried in San Leonardo were victims of the Black Death (1347-1353) and the data confirmed the lack of inspection of the corpses despite the presence of numerous coins. This study represents molecular evidence, for the first time, of Southern Italy's involvement in the second wave of the plague pandemic.
锡蓬托的圣莱昂纳多修道院(意大利南部普利亚大区)在中世纪是一个重要的宗教和医疗中心。它是沿着法兰西之路前往蒙特圣安杰洛圣殿的朝圣者以及途经曼弗雷多尼亚港口的商人的必经之地。普利亚大区考古监督局最近对相关墓地的一部分进行了发掘,确认其年代为13世纪末至14世纪初。两座单人墓穴中保存着遗体,旁边有许多可追溯到14世纪的硬币,这些硬币藏在衣服里和系在腰间的袋子里。这些个体的人类遗骸在巴里大都会市ABAP监督局的物理人类学实验室进行了分析。从每个个体身上收集了三颗牙齿,并送往普利亚和巴西利卡塔实验动物卫生研究所,以研究疟疾、鼠疫、结核病、流行性斑疹伤寒和马耳他热(布鲁氏菌病)等传染病,这些疾病可能与埋葬过程中对尸体缺乏检查有关。使用PCR分析从收集的六颗牙齿和另外两颗无关的人类牙齿(阴性对照)中提取的DNA,以验证人类DNA(β -球蛋白)和诸如 spp.、 spp.、 spp.、 spp. 和 spp. 等病原体的存在。确定扩增子的核苷酸序列以确认结果。从所有八颗牙齿提取物中成功扩增出人类DNA,并且在六颗牙齿中的四颗中扩增并测序了 的两个不同基因。分子分析确定埋葬在圣莱昂纳多的个体是黑死病(1347 - 1353年)的受害者,数据证实尽管有大量硬币存在,但尸体仍缺乏检查。这项研究首次提供了意大利南部参与第二次鼠疫大流行的分子证据。