An assessment of the use of human samples in ancient DNA studies

This thesis addresses gaps that exist in the theory and knowledge of ancient DNA (aDNA). Much of the underlying basis of the field has been neglected in the excitement that followed the first aDNA studies. Therefore the results of many studies have been based on untested assumptions about the nature...

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Main Author: Gilbert, Marcus Thomas Pius
Other Authors: Cooper, Alan : Holmes, Edward
Published: University of Oxford 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.404119
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4041192015-03-19T05:14:30ZAn assessment of the use of human samples in ancient DNA studiesGilbert, Marcus Thomas PiusCooper, Alan : Holmes, Edward2003This thesis addresses gaps that exist in the theory and knowledge of ancient DNA (aDNA). Much of the underlying basis of the field has been neglected in the excitement that followed the first aDNA studies. Therefore the results of many studies have been based on untested assumptions about the nature of post mortem DNA damage, sample preservation, contamination, and the efficacy of sample decontamination techniques. The validity of such results is questionable if the assumptions prove false. Hydrolytic post mortem DNA damage may modify recovered aDNA sequences. This thesis reports new insights into the biochemical basis of, predisposition of certain sequences and nucleotide positions towards, and subsequent effects of, such damage. Parallels of post mortem damage with in vivo mutation also enable insights into DNA sequence evolution. The long-term survival of DNA, and contamination of samples with exogenous DNA are two related problems characteristic to aDNA. The survival of endogenous DNA within bone, teeth and hair samples, the susceptibility of such samples to contamination, and the efficacy of decontamination techniques used to remedy such problems are investigated. The results highlight serious flaws in using bone and teeth as a DNA source. In contrast, the results demonstrate that hair may present a valuable DNA source for future studies. Numerous studies have reported the retrieval of ancient pathogen DNA from human samples. Analyses of the DNA content within teeth extracted from putative victims of the 2<sup>nd</sup> plague argue that such studies are at great risk from DNA degradation, and contamination arising due to environmental microorganisms. An extrapolation of these results using basic physical and chemical theory is used to evaluate the potential survival of aDNA in ancient Egyptian remains. This suggests that positive results from such samples are unlikely.572.8638Evolution (zoology) : Archeology : Molecular biophysics (biochemistry) : Biology : Genetics (life sciences) : ancient : humans : contamination : Yersinia : pestisUniversity of Oxfordhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.404119http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:434e285b-bf62-41fe-8250-5f4273f38152Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 572.8638
Evolution (zoology) : Archeology : Molecular biophysics (biochemistry) : Biology : Genetics (life sciences) : ancient : humans : contamination : Yersinia : pestis
spellingShingle 572.8638
Evolution (zoology) : Archeology : Molecular biophysics (biochemistry) : Biology : Genetics (life sciences) : ancient : humans : contamination : Yersinia : pestis
Gilbert, Marcus Thomas Pius
An assessment of the use of human samples in ancient DNA studies
description This thesis addresses gaps that exist in the theory and knowledge of ancient DNA (aDNA). Much of the underlying basis of the field has been neglected in the excitement that followed the first aDNA studies. Therefore the results of many studies have been based on untested assumptions about the nature of post mortem DNA damage, sample preservation, contamination, and the efficacy of sample decontamination techniques. The validity of such results is questionable if the assumptions prove false. Hydrolytic post mortem DNA damage may modify recovered aDNA sequences. This thesis reports new insights into the biochemical basis of, predisposition of certain sequences and nucleotide positions towards, and subsequent effects of, such damage. Parallels of post mortem damage with in vivo mutation also enable insights into DNA sequence evolution. The long-term survival of DNA, and contamination of samples with exogenous DNA are two related problems characteristic to aDNA. The survival of endogenous DNA within bone, teeth and hair samples, the susceptibility of such samples to contamination, and the efficacy of decontamination techniques used to remedy such problems are investigated. The results highlight serious flaws in using bone and teeth as a DNA source. In contrast, the results demonstrate that hair may present a valuable DNA source for future studies. Numerous studies have reported the retrieval of ancient pathogen DNA from human samples. Analyses of the DNA content within teeth extracted from putative victims of the 2<sup>nd</sup> plague argue that such studies are at great risk from DNA degradation, and contamination arising due to environmental microorganisms. An extrapolation of these results using basic physical and chemical theory is used to evaluate the potential survival of aDNA in ancient Egyptian remains. This suggests that positive results from such samples are unlikely.
author2 Cooper, Alan : Holmes, Edward
author_facet Cooper, Alan : Holmes, Edward
Gilbert, Marcus Thomas Pius
author Gilbert, Marcus Thomas Pius
author_sort Gilbert, Marcus Thomas Pius
title An assessment of the use of human samples in ancient DNA studies
title_short An assessment of the use of human samples in ancient DNA studies
title_full An assessment of the use of human samples in ancient DNA studies
title_fullStr An assessment of the use of human samples in ancient DNA studies
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of the use of human samples in ancient DNA studies
title_sort assessment of the use of human samples in ancient dna studies
publisher University of Oxford
publishDate 2003
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.404119
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