Preferential access to genetic information from endogenous hominin ancient DNA and accurate quantitative SNP-typing via SPEX
Author(s) -
Paul Brotherton,
Juan José Martínez Sánchez,
Alan Cooper,
Phillip Endicott
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkp897
Subject(s) - biology , ancient dna , genotyping , polymerase chain reaction , genetics , dna , recombinant dna , primer (cosmetics) , dna sequencing , genotype , typing , primer extension , computational biology , base sequence , gene , population , chemistry , demography , organic chemistry , sociology
The analysis of targeted genetic loci from ancient, forensic and clinical samples is usually built upon polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-generated sequence data. However, many studies have shown that PCR amplification from poor-quality DNA templates can create sequence artefacts at significant levels. With hominin (human and other hominid) samples, the pervasive presence of highly PCR-amplifiable human DNA contaminants in the vast majority of samples can lead to the creation of recombinant hybrids and other non-authentic artefacts. The resulting PCR-generated sequences can then be difficult, if not impossible, to authenticate. In contrast, single primer extension (SPEX)-based approaches can genotype single nucleotide polymorphisms from ancient fragments of DNA as accurately as modern DNA. A single SPEX-type assay can amplify just one of the duplex DNA strands at target loci and generate a multi-fold depth-of-coverage, with non-authentic recombinant hybrids reduced to undetectable levels. Crucially, SPEX-type approaches can preferentially access genetic information from damaged and degraded endogenous ancient DNA templates over modern human DNA contaminants. The development of SPEX-type assays offers the potential for highly accurate, quantitative genotyping from ancient hominin samples.Paul Brotherton, Juan J. Sanchez, Alan Cooper and Phillip Endicot
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