Neolithic and medieval virus genomes reveal complex evolution of hepatitis B.

Elife
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

The hepatitis B virus (HBV) is one of the most widespread human pathogens known today, yet its origin and evolutionary history are still unclear and controversial. Here, we report the analysis of three ancient HBV genomes recovered from human skeletons found at three different archaeological sites in Germany. We reconstructed two Neolithic and one medieval HBV genome by assembly from shotgun DNA sequencing data. Additionally, we observed HBV-specific peptides using paleo-proteomics. Our results demonstrated that HBV has circulated in the European population for at least 7000 years. The Neolithic HBV genomes show a high genomic similarity to each other. In a phylogenetic network, they do not group with any human-associated HBV genome and are most closely related to those infecting African non-human primates. The ancient viruses appear to represent distinct lineages that have no close relatives today and possibly went extinct. Our results reveal the great potential of ancient DNA from human skeletons in order to study the long-time evolution of blood borne viruses.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Elife
Volume
7
Date Published
2018 05 10
ISSN
2050-084X
DOI
10.7554/eLife.36666
PubMed ID
29745896
PubMed Central ID
PMC6008052
Links
Grant list
PMPDP3_171320/1 / Swiss National Science Foundation / Switzerland
APGREID / European Research Council / International