On the Origin of Leprosy
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 13 May 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 308 (5724) , 1040-1042
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science/1109759
Abstract
Leprosy, a chronic human disease with potentially debilitating neurological consequences, results from infection with Mycobacterium leprae . This unculturable pathogen has undergone extensive reductive evolution, with half of its genome now occupied by pseudogenes. Using comparative genomics, we demonstrated that all extant cases of leprosy are attributable to a single clone whose dissemination worldwide can be retraced from analysis of very rare single-nucleotide polymorphisms. The disease seems to have originated in Eastern Africa or the Near East and spread with successive human migrations. Europeans or North Africans introduced leprosy into West Africa and the Americas within the past 500 years.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microsatellite Mapping of Mycobacterium leprae Populations in Infected HumansJournal of Clinical Microbiology, 2004
- Genotypic Variation and Stability of Four Variable-Number Tandem Repeats and Their Suitability for Discriminating Strains ofMycobacterium lepraeJournal of Clinical Microbiology, 2004
- Encoded errors: mutations and rearrangements mediated by misalignment at repetitive DNA sequencesMolecular Microbiology, 2004
- LeprosyPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- The application of molecular genetic approaches to the study of human evolutionNature Genetics, 2003
- Aquatic Insects as a Vector for Mycobacterium ulceransApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2002
- Massive gene decay in the leprosy bacillusNature, 2001
- Deciphering the biology of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from the complete genome sequenceNature, 1998
- How clonal are bacteria?Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1993
- Use of an ordered cosmid library to deduce the genomic organization of Mycobacterium lepraeMolecular Microbiology, 1993