Publication | Open Access
Ancient herpes simplex 1 genomes reveal recent viral structure in Eurasia
40
Citations
92
References
2022
Year
Virus EpidemiologyGeneticsHuman MigrationsGenomicsPhylogenetic AnalysisPathogen DiscoveryViral EvolutionPhylogeneticsHuman PhenotypesHuman OriginVirus PhylogenyVirus GeneViral GeneticsSimplex 1VirologyHuman EvolutionEpidemiologyMolecular VirologyEmerging Infectious DiseasesBronze Age MigrationsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyHerpesvirusesMedicineAncient Genomes
Human herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), a life-long infection spread by oral contact, infects a majority of adults globally. Phylogeographic clustering of sampled diversity into European, pan-Eurasian, and African groups has suggested the virus codiverged with human migrations out of Africa, although a much younger origin has also been proposed. We present three full ancient European HSV-1 genomes and one partial genome, dating from the 3rd to 17th century CE, sequenced to up to 9.5× with paired human genomes up to 10.16×. Considering a dataset of modern and ancient genomes, we apply phylogenetic methods to estimate the age of sampled modern Eurasian HSV-1 diversity to 4.68 (3.87 to 5.65) ka. Extrapolation of estimated rates to a global dataset points to the age of extant sampled HSV-1 as 5.29 (4.60 to 6.12) ka, suggesting HSV-1 lineage replacement coinciding with the late Neolithic period and following Bronze Age migrations.
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