2016
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.22960
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Successful enrichment and recovery of whole mitochondrial genomes from ancient human dental calculus

Abstract: Objectives Archaeological dental calculus is a rich source of host-associated biomolecules. Importantly, however, dental calculus is more accurately described as a calcified microbial biofilm than a host tissue. As such, concerns regarding destructive analysis of human remains may not apply as strongly to dental calculus, opening the possibility of obtaining human health and ancestry information from dental calculus in cases where destructive analysis of conventional skeletal remains is not permitted. Here we … Show more

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Cited by 70 publications
(67 citation statements)
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“…Target enrichment and Illumina sequencing. Targeted enrichment for the complete mtDNA genome was performed following (Maricic, et al 2010;Ozga, et al 2016). MtDNA enriched libraries were sequenced on multiple runs of the Illumina MiSeq.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Target enrichment and Illumina sequencing. Targeted enrichment for the complete mtDNA genome was performed following (Maricic, et al 2010;Ozga, et al 2016). MtDNA enriched libraries were sequenced on multiple runs of the Illumina MiSeq.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No further work or exploration has been done for mitochondrial m6dA analysis, which is completely an unexplored as well as an exciting field to embark on. Human mitochondrial DNA is smaller in size (16569 bp) in comparison to nuclear DNA (~3 x 10 9 bp), present in high copy number per cell (~10 3 -10 4 , nearly 10 copies is preset in each of the tens of hundreds of mitochondria per cell) (Lightowlers et al, 1997) and having intact and preserved DNA in double membranous structure, even in the dead and massively destroyed tissues (Barta et al, 2014;Higgins et al, 2015;Nesheva, 2015;Ozga et al, 2016;Schwarz et al, 2009), it has therefore clear advantages over nuclear DNA to be providentially recovered and easily manipulated from the questioned samples referred to the forensic laboratories.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to microbial remains, dental calculus also entraps host cells and thus can serve as a source for host DNA 14,50 . In our samples, a median of 3.1% ± 11.1% (range 0.06-90.6%) of postprocessing reads mapped to their respective host genomes, with a median average coverage per site of 0.002X ± 0.02 (range 0.0001-0.4X) (Table S3).…”
Section: Host Dna Is Preserved In Dental Calculusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We were also able to recover complete mitochondrial genomes (>1X average coverage per site) for one gorilla, three reindeer and two bear samples. Mitochondrial genomes provide a rich source of information about the host evolutionary history, host population structure and changes in host population sizes over time 18,50 . With deeper metagenomics sequencing and/or employment of target capture techniques, the relatively high proportion of host reads allows for investigations into the importance of host genetic diversity and demography in shaping microbiome composition from the same dental calculus sample.…”
Section: Host Dna Is Preserved In Dental Calculusmentioning
confidence: 99%