This has been done before using H. pylori as a model, but it is remarkable nonetheless to see how innovative researchers are in using different models to track human migration patterns… this time with HSV 1 or human simplex virus 1.
For the study, which is published in the open access journal PLoS ONE, the researchers compared 31 strains of HSV-1 collected in Africa, Europe, Asia, and North America. They then mapped patterns of mutations using high-capacity sequencing and to reconstruct cladograms. They were able to support what anthropologists and molecular geneticists have already — that humans originated in Africa, spread out into Europe and Asia, and then ultimately crossed the Beringia “land bridge” into North America.
Related articles
- Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV-1) Study Confirms ‘out of Africa’ Migration of Ancient Humans (guardianlv.com)
- Hitchhiking virus confirms saga of ancient human migration (eurekalert.org)
- Herpes virus traces the path of human migration (nbcnews.com)
- Herpes Virus Genetic Study Supports Out-of-Africa Theory of Human Migration (sci-news.com)
Filed under: Blog, Photo, Physical Anthropology Tagged: africa, asia, helicobacter pylori, Herpes simplex, Herpes simplex virus, human migration, middle east, United States, University of Wisconsin–Madison