Home World Teeth of Irishman who lived 4,000 years ago offers 'unprecedented' breakthrough

Teeth of Irishman who lived 4,000 years ago offers 'unprecedented' breakthrough


The teeth of an Irishman who lived 4,000 years ago have given

The teeth of an Irishman who lived 4,000 years ago have given “unprecedented” insight into the evolution of the human diet (Image: SWNS)

The teeth of an Irishman who lived 4,000 years ago have given “unprecedented” insight into the evolution of the human diet.

They were among skeletal remains excavated from a limestone cave at Killuragh, County Limerick, by archaeology Professor Peter Woodman, of University College Cork, before his death in 2017.

Scientists have uncovered well-preserved microbiomes from two of the Bronze Age teeth.

They contained bacteria that cause gum disease, as well as the first high-quality ancient genome from S. mutans, an oral bacterium that is one of the major causes of tooth decay.

The discoveries, described in the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution, allowed the research team to assess the impact of past dietary changes on the oral microbiome across thousands of years, including major changes coinciding with the popularisation of sugar and industrialisation.

The teeth, both derived from the same Bronze Age man, also provided a “snapshot” of oral health in the past, with one tooth showing evidence of microbiome imbalance.

Microbial DNA extracted from ancient human teeth can provide information on the evolution of the oral microbiome.

The excellent preservation of DNA in fossilised dental plaque has made the oral cavity one of the best-studied aspects of the ancient human body.

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However, scientists have retrieved very few full genomes from oral bacteria from before the Medieval era.

Researchers have limited knowledge about prehistoric bacterial diversity and the relative impact of recent dietary changes compared to ancient ones, such as the spread of farming starting about 10,000 years ago.

S. mutans is the primary cause of dental cavities and very common in oral microbiomes.

However, it is exceptionally rare in the ancient genomic record.

Scientists believe one reason for its rarity could be its acid-producing nature as the acid causes the tooth to decay, but also degrades DNA and prevents plaque from mineralising.

They suspect the absence of S. mutans DNA in ancient mouths could also reflect less favourable habitats for the species across most of human history.

Archaeologists have observed an uptick in dental cavities in skeletal remains following the adoption of cereal agriculture, but cavities become much more common in the Early Modern period, beginning about 1500 AD.

While other teeth in the Irish cave showed advanced dental decay there was no evidence of caries on the sampled teeth.

But the researchers revealed one tooth root yielded an “unprecedented” quantity of mutans sequences.

Study senior author Dr Lara Cassidy, an Assistant Professor at Trinity College Dublin, said: “We were very surprised to see such a large abundance of mutans in this 4,000 year old tooth.”

“It is a remarkably rare find and suggests this man was at high risk of developing cavities right before his death.”

She believes the cool, dry, and alkaline conditions of the cave may have contributed to the exceptional preservation of S. mutans DNA, but its high abundance also points to dysbiosis.

The researchers found that while S. mutans DNA was plentiful, other streptococcal species were virtually absent from the tooth sample.

They said that implies that the natural balance of the oral biofilm had been upset mutans had outcompeted the other species leading to a pre-disease state.

The team say the study lends support to the “disappearing microbiome” hypothesis, which proposes the microbiomes of our ancestors were more diverse than our own today.

Alongside the S. mutans genome, the research team reconstructed two genomes for T. forsythia a bacteria involved in gum disease and found them to be highly divergent from one another, implying much higher levels of strain diversity in prehistoric populations.

Study first author Iseult Jackson, a PhD candidate, said: “The two sampled teeth contained quite divergent strains of T. forsythia.”

“These strains from a single ancient mouth were more genetically different from one another than any pair of modern strains in our dataset, despite these modern samples deriving from Europe, Japan, and the USA.”

“This is interesting because a loss of biodiversity can have negative impacts on the oral environment and human health.”

She said the reconstructed T. forsythia and S. mutans genomes revealed “dramatic” changes in the oral microenvironment over the last 750 years.

In recent centuries, one lineage of T. forsythia has become dominant in global populations.

The researchers said that is the tell-tale sign of a selective episode where one strain rises rapidly in frequency due to some genetic advantage.

The team found that post-industrial T. forsythia genomes have acquired many new genes that help the bacteria colonise the oral environment and cause disease.

S. mutans also showed evidence of recent lineage expansions and changes in gene content, which coincide with the popularisation of sugar.

However, the researchers found that modern S. mutans populations have remained more diverse than T. forsythia, with deep splits in the mutans evolutionary tree pre-dating the Killuragh genome.

They believe it was driven by differences in the evolutionary mechanisms that shape genome diversity in the species.

Dr Cassidy added: “S. mutans is very adept at swapping genetic material across strains.”

“This allows an advantageous innovation to be spread across mutans lineages, rather than one lineage becoming dominant and replacing all others.”

She said that, in effect, both the disease-causing bacteria have changed “dramatically” from the Bronze Age to today, but it appears that very recent cultural transitions – such as the consumption of sugar – have had an “inordinate” impact.

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