Library Construction for Ancient Genomics: Single Strand or Double Strand?
Author(s) -
E. Andrew Bennett,
Diyendo Massilani,
Giulia Lizzo,
Julien Daligault,
Eva-María Geigl,
Thierry Grange
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
biotechniques
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.617
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1940-9818
pISSN - 0736-6205
DOI - 10.2144/000114176
Subject(s) - ancient dna , dna , dna sequencing , deep sequencing , dna ligase , ion semiconductor sequencing , biology , computational biology , genomic library , genome , genomics , illumina dye sequencing , genomic dna , library , genetics , base sequence , gene , population , demography , 16s ribosomal rna , sociology
International audienceA novel method of library construction that takes advantage of a single-stranded DNA ligase has been recently described and used to generate high-resolution genomes from ancient DNA samples. While this method is effective and appears to recover a greater fraction of endogenous ancient material, there has been no direct comparison of results from different library construction methods on a diversity of ancient DNA samples. In addition, the single-stranded method is limited by high cost and lengthy preparation time and is restricted to the Illumina sequencing platform. Here we present in-depth comparisons of the different available library construction methods for DNA purified from 16 ancient and modern faunal and human remains, covering a range of different taphonomic and climatic conditions. We further present a DNA purification method for ancient samples that permits the concentration of a large volume of dissolved extract with minimal manipulation and methodological improvements to the single-stranded method to render it more economical and versatile, in particular to expand its use to both the Illumina and the Ion Torrent sequencing platforms. We show that the single-stranded library construction method improves the relative recovery of endogenous to exogenous DNA for most, but not all, of our ancient extracts
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