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A Method for the Temperature-Controlled Extraction of DNA from Ancient Bones

Elena Essel, Petra Korlević, Matthias Meyer

2021BioTechniques15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Contamination with microbial and other exogenous DNA poses a significant challenge in the generation of genome-wide sequence data from ancient skeletal remains. Here we describe a method for separating ancient DNA into multiple fractions during DNA extraction by sequential temperature-controlled release of DNA into sodium phosphate buffer. An evaluation of the effectiveness of the method using a set of three ancient bones resulted in between 1.6- and 32-fold enrichment of endogenous DNA compared with regular DNA extraction. For two bones, the method outperformed previous methods of decontaminating ancient bones, including hypochlorite treatment, which resulted in near-complete destruction of DNA in the worst-preserved sample. This extraction method expands the spectrum of methods available for depleting contaminant DNA from ancient skeletal remains.

Topics & Concepts

Ancient DNADNASodium hypochloriteExtraction (chemistry)DNA extractionDNA sequencingBiologyExogenous DNAGenomeChemistryPolymerase chain reactionChromatographyBiochemistryGeneMedicineOrganic chemistryEnvironmental healthPopulationForensic and Genetic ResearchForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesArchaeology and ancient environmental studies