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Medieval latrines shed light on gut health of 15th-century Europeans

The findings could also help in understanding more about the microbial gut health of present-day humans.

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Left, a wooden latrine from medieval Riga, Latvia and right, a microscopic fish tapeworm egg found in the latrine

Ancient gut bacteria unearthed in medieval latrines could provide important clues about the gastrointestinal health of present-day populations, scientists believe.

Their findings, published in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, are based on an analysis of the sediments found in 15th-century toilets in Latvia and Jerusalem.

The researchers say their work provides an insight into the gut microbiomes – the ecosystem of bacteria present in the digestive tracts – of pre-industrial agricultural populations.

They believe the findings could also help in understanding more about the health of the gut microbes of present-day humans – as there is “a growing body of evidence” that has linked changes in the microbiome to many diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease, allergies, and obesity.

Biological anthropologist Dr Piers Mitchell, of Cambridge University – who is one of the study authors, said: “If we are to determine what constitutes a healthy microbiome for modern people, we should start looking at the microbiomes of our ancestors who lived before antibiotic use, fast food, and the other trappings of industrialisation.”

The team performed a microscopic analysis of the sediment samples taken from medieval latrines in Riga, Latvia as well as Jerusalem, thought to be from some time between the 14th and 15th centuries.

Wooden latrine from medieval Riga, Latvia
Wooden latrine from medieval Riga, Latvia (Uldis Kalejs)

To know more about the kind of bacteria that was present in the digestive tract of European and Middle Eastern ancestors, the researchers had to distinguish the microbes that once formed the in the gut from those normally found in the soil.

Once that was done, the team collected evidence of a wide range of bacteria known to inhabit the intestines of modern humans, such as archaea, protozoa, parasitic worms and fungi.

The researchers then compared the the DNA of these organisms to the microbiomes from present-day industrial as well as hunter-gatherer populations.

Susanna Sabin, a doctoral alumna of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany – who co-led the study, said: “We found that the microbiome at Jerusalem and Riga had some common characteristics – they did show similarity to modern hunter gatherer microbiomes and modern industrial microbiomes, but were different enough that they formed their own unique group.

Researcher Susanna Sabin
Researcher Susanna Sabin performing an analysis of the sediment samples (Zandra Fagernas)

“We don’t know of a modern source that harbours the microbial content we see here.”

Prof Mitchell said: “These latrines gave us much more representative information about the wider pre-industrial population of these regions than an individual faecal sample would have.” explains Mitchell.

“Combining evidence from light microscopy and ancient DNA analysis allows us to identify the amazing variety of organisms present in the intestines of our ancestors who lived centuries ago.”

The researchers say further studies will be needed at other archaeological sites and time periods to fully understand how the microbiome changed in human groups over time.

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