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Antibiotic-resistant genes seen in mummy

Pisa U. study on 11th-century remains in Florence museum

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Pisa, November 10 - Italian researchers have discovered antibiotic-resistant genes in a Peruvian mummy from the Pre-Columbian era.
    Paleopathologists from Pisa University carried out the research on the mummy that was brought to Italy at the end of the 19th century by Italian doctors and naturalists. It is housed in Florence's Museum of Anthropology and Ethnology.
    "We identified several genes in the mummy's remains that are resistant to some types of antibiotics," said paleopathologist Gino Fornaciari.
    The analysis was carried out on genetic material taken from the remains of a roughly 20-year-old woman whose corpse mummified naturally in the cold and dry climate of the Andes. She is estimated to have lived in the 11th or 12th century.
    By examining her internal organs, researchers were able to identify her cause of death as the Chagas tropical parasitic disease, caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi.
    The study was able to identify several antibiotic-resistant genes that would have made modern antibiotic treatment ineffective.
   

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