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Research Publication

Ancient DNA study provides clues to leprosy susceptibility in medieval Europe.

Romeyer-Dherbey Joanna H, JH Caliebe, Amke A et al.

41540446 PubMed ID
24 Authors
2026-01-16 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

RJ
Romeyer-Dherbey Joanna H
JC
JH Caliebe
AA
Amke A
ӦO
Ӧzer Onur
OD
O da Silva
NA
Nicolas Antonio NA
MN
Mejía Nicolás Mendoza
NM
NM Myburgh
DA
Daniel Anton DA
FK
Fuchs Katharina
KP
K Pedersen
DD
Dorthe Dangvard DD
BJ
Boldsen Jesper
JL
J Larsen
LA
Lars Agersnap LA
SL
Seeberg Lone
LS
L Søvsø
MM
Morten M
RD
Rieger Dirk
DP
D Prescher
AA
Andreas A
NA
Nebel Almut
AK
A Krause-Kyora
BB
Ben B
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Leprosy is a chronic infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium leprae (M. leprae) that reached an epidemic scale in the Middle Ages. Nowadays, the disease is absent in Europe and host genetic influences have been considered as a contributing factor to leprosy disappearance. In this study, we perform a case-control association analysis between multiple human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles and leprosy in a medieval European population. The sample comprises 302 individuals from 18 archaeological sites in Denmark (N = 16) and Germany (N = 2).Our results indicate that HLA-B*38 is associated with leprosy risk. Furthermore, we detect three novel variants that were possibly involved in leprosy risk or protection: HLA-A*23, DRB1*04, and DRB1*13. We also note a subtle temporal change in frequency for several alleles previously associated with infectious diseases, inflammatory disorders, and cancer in present-day populations.This study demonstrates the potential of ancient DNA in the identification of genetic variants involved in predisposition to diseases that are no longer present in Europe but remain endemic elsewhere. Although it is difficult to pinpoint the reason behind the temporal frequency shift, past epidemics of infectious diseases have likely influenced the HLA pool in present-day Europe.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment