Publication

Title: Ancient Pathogen Genomics in Africa – Current Evidence and Future Directions
Authors: Vukovikj M, Mavian C, Wang H, Gifford R, de Oliveira T, Schlebusch C.
Journal: Preprints.org,: (2026)

Abstract

Ancient pathogen genomics has redefined how infectious disease histories are reconstructed,revealing unexpected origins, transmission routes and lineage turnovers that are invisible frommodern genomes alone. Yet this perspective remains heavily biased toward Eurasia and theAmericas, leaving Africa, central to human evolution, biodiversity and zoonotic emergence,largely unexplored. In this review, we assess the current state of ancient pathogen research inAfrica and synthesize insights from bacterial, parasitic and viral perspectives. We identify Africaas a pivotal frontier for the field and outline strategic priorities to move from isolated detectionstoward continent-scale reconstructions of past disease landscapes, with direct relevance forunderstanding present-day and future epidemic risk.

Download: Full text paper

Citation: Vukovikj M, Mavian C, Wang H, Gifford R, de Oliveira T, Schlebusch C. Ancient Pathogen Genomics in Africa – Current Evidence and Future Directions Preprints.org,: (2026).


KRISP has been created by the coordinated effort of the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN), the Technology Innovation Agency (TIA) and the South African Medical Research Countil (SAMRC).


Location: K-RITH Tower Building
Nelson R Mandela School of Medicine, UKZN
719 Umbilo Road, Durban, South Africa.
Director: Prof. Tulio de Oliveira