The Hamilton Spectator

DISEASE DETECTIVES: Study co-led by McMaster University geneticist sheds new light on hepatitis B virus

McMaster University geneticist co-led the new study

- SHERYL UBELACKER

TORONTO — An internatio­nal team of disease detectives has shed new light on a virus that kills almost a million people around the world each year by probing an unusual source — the mummified remains of a young child who died about 450 years ago in Renaissanc­e Italy.

The scientists were able to sequence the complete genome of an ancient strain of hepatitis B after extracting DNA from the naturally mummified body of the two-yearold girl, which was interred with a number of other bodies in the sacristy of the Basilica of Saint Domenico Maggiore in Naples.

In the mid-1980s, before the advent of advanced genomic sequencing, Italian researcher­s had suggested the child likely died of smallpox because of evidence of rash-like scarring on her body.

“The blisters are clearly all over the face ... when you look at the image, your first thought would be smallpox,” agreed Hendrik Poinar, an evolutiona­ry geneticist at McMaster University, who co-led the new study with evolutiona­ry biologist Edward Holmes of the University of Sydney.

But after extracting viral DNA from small samples of the child’s skin and bone and analyzing its genetic signature, researcher­s turned up no evidence of smallpox.

“Nada. We couldn’t find anything,” said Poinar, director of McMaster’s Ancient DNA Centre, who previously helped sequence the genome of the extinct woolly mammoth and traced the genetic evolution of the bacteria that causes bubonic plague.

One of the scientists then turned to what’s called a pathogen enrichment array, a means of testing a DNA sample to see if there’s a genetic match detected among markers for hundreds of viruses, bacteria and other agents.

What emerged was a clear signal for hepatitis B, leading the researcher­s to speculate that the child may have been affected by a rare childhood disease that can follow infection with hepatitis B, known as Gianotti-Crosti syndrome.

“That’s a rash that breaks out extensivel­y on children and it can cause death,” said Poinar.

What surprised the scientists, whose research was published Thursday in the journal PLOS Pathogens, was how little the 16thcentur­y strain of hepatitis B had changed geneticall­y when compared with modern-day samples of the virus.

Hepatitis B is a primarily bloodborne virus that affects the liver. While most adults recover fully from the disease within a few months as their immune system clears the infection, some people develop a chronic lifetime infection that can lead to cirrhosis or liver cancer. A vaccine can prevent hepatitis B, but there’s no curative treatment.

It’s estimated that one-third of the world’s population has been infected with the virus at some point in their lives and that about 350 million people are currently living with a chronic infection.

“This is a virus that still causes considerab­le morbidity and mortality today across the globe, especially in underdevel­oped countries and for lower socioecono­mic status individual­s,” said Poinar, noting it began infecting humans about 60,000 years ago.

“The more we understand about the behaviour of past pandemics and outbreaks, the greater our understand­ing of how modern pathogens might work and spread, and this informatio­n will ultimately help in their control,” he said.

“Understand­ing the evolution of pathogens is quintessen­tial to figuring out how to eradicate them.”

 ?? JD HOWELL, MCMASTER UNIVERSITY ?? Hendrik Poinar, director of McMaster University’s Ancient DNA Centre, co-led an internatio­nal team of disease detectives that shed new light on a virus that kills almost a million people around the world each year.
JD HOWELL, MCMASTER UNIVERSITY Hendrik Poinar, director of McMaster University’s Ancient DNA Centre, co-led an internatio­nal team of disease detectives that shed new light on a virus that kills almost a million people around the world each year.

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