Times Standard (Eureka)

What made Beethoven sick? DNA from his hair offers some clues

- By Maddie Burakoff

NEW YORK >> Nearly 200 years after Ludwig van Beethoven’s death, researcher­s pulled DNA from strands of his hair, searching for clues about the health problems and hearing loss that plagued him.

They weren’t able to crack the case of the German composer’s deafness or severe stomach ailments. But they did find a genetic risk for liver disease, plus a liver-damaging hepatitis B infection in the last months of his life.

These factors, along with his chronic drinking, were probably enough to cause the liver failure that is widely believed to have killed him, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Current Biology.

This Sunday marks the 196th anniversar­y of Beethoven’s death in Vienna on March 26, 1827, at the age of 56. The composer himself wrote that he wanted doctors to study his health problems after he died.

“With Beethoven in particular, it is the case that illnesses sometimes very much limited his creative work,” said study author Axel Schmidt, a geneticist at University Hospital Bonn in Germany. “And for physicians, it has always been a mystery what was really behind it.”

Since his death, scientists have long tried to piece together Beethoven’s medical history and have offered a variety of possible explanatio­ns for his many maladies.

Now, with advances in ancient DNA technology, researcher­s have been able to pull genetic clues from locks of Beethoven’s hair that had been snipped off and preserved as keepsakes. They focused on five locks that are “almost certainly authentic,” coming from the same European male, according to the study.

They also looked at three other historical locks, but weren’t able to confirm those were actually Beethoven’s. Previous tests on one of those locks suggested Beethoven had lead poisoning, but researcher­s concluded that sample was actually from a woman.

After cleaning Beethoven’s hair one strand at a time, scientists dissolved the pieces into a solution and fished out chunks of DNA, said study author Tristan James Alexander Begg, a biological anthropolo­gist at the University of Cambridge.

Getting genes out was a challenge, since DNA in hair gets chopped up into tiny fragments, explained author Johannes Krause, a paleogenet­icist at Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy.

But eventually, after using up almost 10 feet (3 meters) of Beethoven’s hair, they were able to piece together a genome that they could “quiz” for signs of genetic disease, Krause said.

While researcher­s didn’t find any clear genetic signs of what caused Beethoven’s gastrointe­stinal issues, they found that celiac disease and lactose intoleranc­e were unlikely causes. In the future, the genome may offer more clues as we learn more about how genes influence health, Begg said.

The research also led to a surprising discovery: When they tested DNA from living members of the extended Beethoven family, scientists found a discrepanc­y in the Y chromosome­s that get passed down on the father’s side. The Y chromosome­s from the five men matched each other — but they didn’t match the composer’s.

This suggests there was an “extra-pair paternity event” somewhere in the generation­s before Beethoven was born, Begg said. In other words, a child born from an extramarit­al relationsh­ip in the composer’s family tree.

The key question of what caused Beethoven’s hearing loss is still unanswered, said Ohio State University’s Dr. Avraham Z. Cooper, who was not involved in the study. And it may be a difficult one to figure out, because genetics can only show us half of the “nature and nurture” equation that makes up our health.

But he added that the mystery is part of what makes Beethoven so captivatin­g: “I think the fact that we can’t know is OK,” Cooper said.

 ?? JOERG SARBACH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A statue of Ludwig van Beethoven stands outside the opera house in Hannover, Germany, on Aug. 31, 2009.
JOERG SARBACH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A statue of Ludwig van Beethoven stands outside the opera house in Hannover, Germany, on Aug. 31, 2009.

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