Daily Express

Diabetes, MS and arthritis traced back to Black Death

- By Mark Waghorn

THE plague that ravaged Middle Age Europe modified the genes that make us vulnerable to disease.

Diabetes, arthritis and multiple sclerosis can be traced back to the Black Death, research found.

It shaped human evolution by influencin­g responses against pathogens.And pandemics, such as Covid, may do so in the future.

Natural selection occurred at pace in plague survivors, say scientists, and our immune systems have evolved to respond in different ways to pathogens.

But some variants increase the risk of autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis.

Outbreaks

So what had once been a protective gene against plague is today associated with increased susceptibi­lity to illness.

The findings are based on 516 DNA samples extracted from the teeth of individual­s who died before, during or soon after outbreaks. Some were from a mass grave in East Smithfield, London.

A century long “window” enabled an internatio­nal team to identify genetic difference­s that dictated who survived the virus.

Autoimmune disease happens when the body’s natural defence system cannot tell the difference between its own and foreign cells, leading the body to attack itself. There are more than 80 types that affect different organs.

Co-author Professor Hendrik Poinar, of McMaster University in Ontario, explained: “Even a slight advantage means the difference between surviving or passing.

“Of course, those survivors who are of breeding age will pass on their genes.”

The Black Death is the most deadly pandemic, claiming up to 200 million lives between 1346 and 1353. In the study, published in the journal Nature, Prof Luis Barreiro, of Chicago University, said: “A single pathogen can have such a strong impact to the evolution of the immune system.”

 ?? ?? Study...scientists used samples taken from East Smithfield plague pits
Study...scientists used samples taken from East Smithfield plague pits
 ?? Pictures: PA ??
Pictures: PA

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