Ancient DNA from a 5,500-year-old skeleton in Colombia reveals the oldest genome of "Treponema pallidum" yet, sharpening ...
The new information pushes the presence of the bacterium Treponema pallidum back at least 3,000 years from what was ...
From a 5,500-year-old human shin bone, scientists have discovered a close cousin of the pathogen that causes syphilis, ...
And this means we might have been thinking about the origins of syphilis in an entirely wrong way. While the French ...
The findings represent the oldest complete set of genetic information from this bacterial group and shed light on its ...
A 5,500-year-old genome of Treponema pallidum recovered from Colombia has revealed that syphilis-causing bacteria circulated in the Americas millennia before agriculture, undermining the ...
Ancient DNA from a Colombian hunter-gatherer reveals a 5,500-year-old infection, rewriting what we know about syphilis and ...
A 5,500-year-old skeleton from Colombia has revealed the oldest known genome of the bacterium linked to syphilis and related ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Ancient find rewrites 3,000 years of syphilis-like disease history
A 5,500-year-old skeleton from the Americas has yielded the oldest genetic evidence yet of a bacterium closely related to the ...
AZoLifeSciences on MSN
Prehistoric genome pushes back origins of treponemal diseases in the Americas
Scientists have recovered a genome of Treponema pallidum – the bacterium whose subspecies today are responsible for four ...
“Our results push back the association of T. pallidum with humans by thousands of years, possibly more than 10,000 years ago ...
A newly sequenced genome of the bacterium that causes syphilis, Treponema pallidum, highlights the deep antiquity of treponemal diseases in the Americas.
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