Study: Syphilis’s Spread May Be Traced to Christopher Columbus
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The spread of syphilis across the globe probably was sparked by Christopher Columbus and his crew, who ferried the bacterium, or a version of it, to the Old World from the New World, according to a new genetic analysis published yesterday.
A comparison of 23 strains of Treponema pallidum bacteria found that the modern variety that causes the sexually transmitted disease was most closely related to bacteria collected from a remote tribe in Guyana.
Because the tribe has had little contact with the outside world, researchers believe the strain is very close to what was circulating in the Americas at the time of Columbus’s voyage in 1492.
The study, published in the journal Public Library of Science Neglected Tropical Diseases, adds more fuel to the long debate over the origin of syphilis.
“There are loose ends, but … it looks as if it’s very interesting evidence pointing to New World treponematosis being the ancestor of venereal syphilis,” Della Collins Cook, a physical anthropologist at Indiana University, who was not involved in the study, said.
But other experts argued that the study’s findings are still not strong enough to overturn a theory that venereal syphilis in Europe evolved from local strains.
A commentary by molecular anthropologist Connie Mulligan of the University of Florida and others, published in the same journal, also criticized the study, saying the genetic analysis was too murky to create a clear lineage of the disease. “I think the jury is still out,” she said.
The venereal form of syphilis is caused by a subspecies of Treponema pallidum. Other subspecies cause yaws, a tropical disease, and bejel, a illness found in hot, dry climates. Neither of the diseases usually is transmitted sexually.
In the new study, researchers sequenced yaws, bejel, and syphilis strains from around the world. Kristin Harper, an evolutionary biology graduate student at Emory University in Atlanta and lead author of the study, said the team compared the sequences to rabbit syphilis, from which the human variety originally branched off.
The genetic analysis showed that bacteria collected from yaws patients in Guyana were closest to the rabbit strains, although the samples from Guyana were incomplete because they degraded from the tropical heat on the trip back.
Still, the incomplete results agreed with historical documents, which show the first recorded outbreak of venereal syphilis occurred around 1495 when the armies of King Charles VIII of France invaded Naples. The later disbanding of the army helped spread the disease across Europe. But Simon Mays, a human skeletal biologist at English Heritage, an advisory body to the British government on historical preservation, noted that other evidence points to syphilis existing in the Old World long before Columbus. For example, scientists found evidence of venereal syphilis in the teeth of a skeleton from 13th-century Turkey.
The new study “dismisses this evidence much too easily,” Mr. Mays said. Ms. Harper acknowledged that the genetic analysis was limited for lack of more of the Guyana strains.