PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Osteological, biomolecular and geochemical examination of an early anglo-saxon case of lepromatous leprosy.

  • Sarah A Inskip,
  • G Michael Taylor,
  • Sonia R Zakrzewski,
  • Simon A Mays,
  • Alistair W G Pike,
  • Gareth Llewellyn,
  • Christopher M Williams,
  • Oona Y-C Lee,
  • Houdini H T Wu,
  • David E Minnikin,
  • Gurdyal S Besra,
  • Graham R Stewart

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124282
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. e0124282

Abstract

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We have examined a 5th to 6th century inhumation from Great Chesterford, Essex, UK. The incomplete remains are those of a young male, aged around 21-35 years at death. The remains show osteological evidence of lepromatous leprosy (LL) and this was confirmed by lipid biomarker analysis and ancient DNA (aDNA) analysis, which provided evidence for both multi-copy and single copy loci from the Mycobacterium leprae genome. Genotyping showed the strain belonged to the 3I lineage, but the Great Chesterford isolate appeared to be ancestral to 3I strains found in later medieval cases in southern Britain and also continental Europe. While a number of contemporaneous cases exist, at present, this case of leprosy is the earliest radiocarbon dated case in Britain confirmed by both aDNA and lipid biomarkers. Importantly, Strontium and Oxygen isotope analysis suggest that the individual is likely to have originated from outside Britain. This potentially sheds light on the origins of the strain in Britain and its subsequent spread to other parts of the world, including the Americas where the 3I lineage of M. leprae is still found in some southern states of America.