PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Screening archaeological bone for palaeogenetic and palaeoproteomic studies.

  • Ioannis Kontopoulos,
  • Kirsty Penkman,
  • Victoria E Mullin,
  • Laura Winkelbach,
  • Martina Unterländer,
  • Amelie Scheu,
  • Susanne Kreutzer,
  • Henrik B Hansen,
  • Ashot Margaryan,
  • Matthew D Teasdale,
  • Birgit Gehlen,
  • Martin Street,
  • Niels Lynnerup,
  • Ioannis Liritzis,
  • Adamantios Sampson,
  • Christina Papageorgopoulou,
  • Morten E Allentoft,
  • Joachim Burger,
  • Daniel G Bradley,
  • Matthew J Collins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235146
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. e0235146

Abstract

Read online

The recovery and analysis of ancient DNA and protein from archaeological bone is time-consuming and expensive to carry out, while it involves the partial or complete destruction of valuable or rare specimens. The fields of palaeogenetic and palaeoproteomic research would benefit greatly from techniques that can assess the molecular quality prior to sampling. To be relevant, such screening methods should be effective, minimally-destructive, and rapid. This study reports results based on spectroscopic (Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy in attenuated total reflectance [FTIR-ATR]; n = 266), palaeoproteomic (collagen content; n = 226), and palaeogenetic (endogenous DNA content; n = 88) techniques. We establish thresholds for three different FTIR indices, a) the infrared splitting factor [IRSF] that assesses relative changes in bioapatite crystals' size and homogeneity; b) the carbonate-to-phosphate [C/P] ratio as a relative measure of carbonate content in bioapatite crystals; and c) the amide-to-phosphate ratio [Am/P] for assessing the relative organic content preserved in bone. These thresholds are both extremely reliable and easy to apply for the successful and rapid distinction between well- and poorly-preserved specimens. This is a milestone for choosing appropriate samples prior to genomic and collagen analyses, with important implications for biomolecular archaeology and palaeontology.