Diferencia entre revisiones de «ADN antiguo»

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[[Archivo:Ancient DNA.png|thumb|ADN entrelazado extraído del hígado de un sacerdote egipcio que vivió hace 4.000 años, llamado Nekht-Ankh.]]
[[File:Ancient DNA.png|thumb|Cross-linked DNA extracted from the 4,000-year-old liver of the ancient Egyptian priest Nekht-Ankh.]]
El término '''ADN Fósil''', hace referencia a [[ADN]] proveniente de una muestra antigua, como los [[fósil]]es.


'''Ancient DNA''' is [[DNA]] isolated from ancient [[Biological specimen|specimens]].<ref>Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics By Jonathan Pevsner ISBN 978-0-470-08585-1, ISBN 0-470-08585-1</ref> It can be also loosely described as any DNA recovered from biological samples that have not been preserved specifically for later DNA analyses. Examples include the analysis of DNA recovered from archaeological and historical skeletal material, [[Mummy|mummified]] tissues, archival collections of non-frozen medical specimens, preserved plant remains, ice and [[permafrost]] cores, Holocene plankton in marine and lake sediments, and so on. Unlike modern genetic analyses, ancient DNA studies are characterised by low quality DNA. This places limits on what analyses can achieve. Furthermore, due to degradation of the DNA molecules, a process which correlates loosely with factors such as time, temperature, and presence of free water, upper limits exist beyond which no DNA is deemed likely to survive. Allentoft ''et al.'' (2012) tried to calculate this limit by studying the decay of [[Mitochondrial DNA|mitochondrial]] and [[nuclear DNA]] in [[Moa]] bones. The DNA degrades in an [[exponential decay]] process. According to their model, mitochondrial DNA is degraded to an average length of 1 [[base pair]] after 6,830,000 years at −5&nbsp;°C.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Allentoft ME|author2=Collins M|author3=Harker D|author4=Haile J|author5=Oskam CL|author6=Hale ML|author7=Campos PF|author8=Samaniego JA|author9=Gilbert MTP|author10=Willerslev E|author11=Zhang G|author12=Scofield RP|author13=Holdaway RN|author14=Bunce M |title=The half-life of DNA in bone: measuring decay kinetics in 158 dated fossils |journal=[[Proceedings of the Royal Society B]] |volume=279 |issue=1748|pages=4724–33 |date=2012 |doi= 10.1098/rspb.2012.1745}}</ref> The decay kinetics have been measured by accelerated aging experiments further displaying the strong influence of storage temperature and humidity on DNA decay.<ref name=grass>{{cite journal | doi = 10.1002/anie.201411378| title = Robust Chemical Preservation of Digital Information on DNA in Silica with Error-Correcting Codes| journal = Angewandte Chemie International Edition| volume = 54| issue = 8| pages = 2552–2555| year = 2015| last1 = Grass | first1 = R. N. | last2 = Heckel | first2 = R. | last3 = Puddu | first3 = M. | last4 = Paunescu | first4 = D. | last5 = Stark | first5 = W. J. }}</ref> Nuclear DNA degrades at least twice as fast as mtDNA. As such, early studies that reported recovery of much older DNA, for example from [[Cretaceous]] [[dinosaur]] remains, may have stemmed from contamination of the sample.
El estudio del '''ADN fósil''' se usa en [[paleogenética]]. Utiliza la reacción en cadena de la polimerasa [[Reacción en cadena de la polimerasa|PCR]], permitiendo estudiar registros moleculares de ADN que sean lo suficientemente antiguos, pudiendo realizar secuenciaciones y estudiar su composición. Los restos de ADN del fósil más antiguo que se conoce (que han podido ser recuperados y leídos) pertenecen a los [[Hombre de Neandertal|neandertales]] no sobrepasando los 50.000 años.


== History of ancient DNA studies ==
Recientemente ha podido constatarse la posibilidad de extraer restos de ADN de fósiles, y amplificarlos mediante [[Reacción en cadena de la polimerasa|PCR]]. La evolución de estos conocimientos ha sido muy rápida, ya que si a finales de los 90 existían reticencias sobre la veracidad de los restos fósiles de ADN,<ref>Austin, J. J., Smith, A. B. & Thomas, R. H. 1997. Palaeontology in a molecular world: the search for authentic ancient DNA. Trends in Ecology & Evolution; 12: 303-306.</ref> para el año 2000 ya existían publicaciones y se había establecido una metodología.<ref> Lindahl, T. 2000. Fossil DNA. Current Biology 10: 616.</ref> Por aquél entonces ya se habían extraído secuencias cortas de fósiles de [[Homo neanderthalensis|Neandertal]] y de [[mammuthus|mamut]]. Años después, también hay multitud de ejemplos en [[plantae|plantas]]<ref> Sangtae K., Douglas E. S., Pamela S. S., & Youngbae S. 2004. DNA sequences from Miocene fossils: an ndhF sequence of ''Magnolia latahensis'' (Magnoliaceae) and an rbcL sequence of Persea pseudocarolinensis (Lauraceae).''American Journal of Botany'';91:615-620.</ref> e incluso bacterias.<ref> Coolen, M. J. L., & Overmann, J. 2007. 217 000-year-old DNA sequences of green sulfur bacteria in Mediterranean sapropels and their implications for the reconstruction of the paleoenvironment.
The first study of what would come to be called aDNA came in 1984, when Russ Higuchi and colleagues at Berkeley reported that traces of DNA from a museum specimen of the [[Quagga]] not only remained in the specimen over 150 years after the death of the individual, but could be extracted and sequenced.<ref name="pmid6504142">{{cite journal |author=Higuchi R|author2=Bowman B|author3=Freiberger M|author4=Ryder OA|author5=Wilson AC |title=DNA sequences from the quagga, an extinct member of the horse family |journal=Nature |volume=312 |issue=5991 |pages=282–4 |date=1984 |pmid=6504142 |doi= 10.1038/312282a0|bibcode = 1984Natur.312..282H }}</ref> Over the next two years, through investigations into natural and artificially mummified specimens, [[Svante Pääbo]] confirmed that this phenomenon was not limited to relatively recent museum specimens but could apparently be replicated in a range of [[Mummy|mummified]] human samples that dated as far back as several thousand years (Pääbo 1985a; Pääbo 1985b; Pääbo 1986).
Environmental Microbiology 9 (1), 238–249.</ref> Así, Golenberg y su equipo obtuvieron una secuencia parcial de DNA de [[cloroplasto]] perteneciente a un fósil de ''[[Magnolia latahensis]]''.<ref name="Golenberg">Golenberg E. M. D. E. Giannasi M. T. Clegg C. J. Smiley M. Durbin D. Henderson G. Zurawski 1990 Chloroplast DNA sequence from a Miocene Magnolia species. Nature 344: 656-658</ref> No obstante, se ha mantenido la controversia sobre la fiabilidad de los procedimientos utilizados.<ref>Hebsgaard, M. B., Phillips, M. J., & Willerslev, E. 2005. Geologically ancient DNA: fact or artefact? Trends in Microbiology;13: 212-220</ref> Este ADN fósil permitiría establecer relaciones filogenéticas entre distintos taxones, además de facilitar una visión global de las ramas evolutivas.<ref>Cooper, A. 1997. Studies of Avian Ancient DNA: From Jurassic Park to Modern Island Extinctions. Avian Molecular Evolution and Systematics: 345-373.</ref> Además, facilita la estimación en la tasa de [[mutación]] existente entre taxones relacionados.<ref name="Golenberg" /><ref> DeSalle R. J. Gatesy W. Wheeler D. Grimaldi. 1992. DNA sequences from a fossil termite in Oligo-Miocene amber and their phylogenetic implications. Science 257: 1993-1936.</ref>
Nevertheless, the laborious processes that were required at that time to sequence such DNA (through [[bacterial cloning]]) were an effective brake on the development of the field of ancient DNA (aDNA). However, with the development of the [[Polymerase chain reaction|Polymerase Chain Reaction]] (PCR) in the late 1980s the field began to progress rapidly.<ref name="pmid3431465">{{cite journal |author=Mullis KB|author2=Faloona FA |title=Specific synthesis of DNA in vitro via a polymerase-catalyzed chain reaction |journal=Meth. Enzymol. |volume=155 |pages=335–50 |date=1987 |pmid=3431465 |doi= 10.1016/0076-6879(87)55023-6|series=Methods in Enzymology |isbn=978-0-12-182056-5}}</ref><ref name="pmid2448875">{{cite journal |author=Saiki RK |title=Primer-directed enzymatic amplification of DNA with a thermostable DNA polymerase |journal=Science |volume=239 |issue=4839 |pages=487–91 |date=January 1988 |pmid=2448875 |doi= 10.1126/science.2448875|name-list-format=vanc |author2=Gelfand DH |author3=Stoffel S |display-authors=3 |last4=Scharf |first4=S. |last5=Higuchi |first5=R |last6=Horn |first6=G. |last7=Mullis |first7=K. |last8=Erlich |first8=H.|bibcode = 1988Sci...239..487S }}</ref>


Double primer PCR amplification of aDNA (jumping-PCR) can produce highly skewed and non-authentic sequence artifacts. Multiple primer, [[Nested polymerase chain reaction|nested PCR]] strategy was used to overcome those shortcomings.
Los métodos propuestos son:
[[Archivo:Oligochlora semirugosa.jpg|thumb|150px|Insectos en ámbar]]
* '''Extracción de ámbar:''' Esta sugerencia, en un principio inviable y ficticia, fue alimentada en la fantasía popular a través de la novela de ficción (y posterior película) ''[[Parque Jurásico (franquicia)|Parque Jurásico]]''. En este libro se sugería que insectos chupadores atrapados en ámbar podían preservar magníficamente ADN de otros animales, como por ejemplo, [[dinosauria|dinosaurios]]. En la realidad se ha podido extraer ADN de insectos conservados en ámbar de una antigüedad superior a 100 millones de años, sin embargo los fragmentos de ADN así obtenidos hasta ahora corresponden a los propios insectos, no a otros animales de los que hubieran podido alimentarse.<ref>Cano, R. J., Poinar, H. N., Pieniazek, N. J., Acra, A. y Poinar, G. O. (1993). «[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8505978 Amplification and sequencing of DNA from a 120–135-million-year-old weevil]». ''Nature'' 363: 536-538</ref>
* '''Extracción de cristales en huesos:''' Se ha observado que en los huesos a veces se forman cristales. Los científicos demostraron que el ADN contenido en estos cristales se conservaba en un relativo buen estado.<ref>Salamon, M., Tuross, N., Arensburg, B., Weiner, S. 2005. Relatively well preserved DNA is present in the crystal aggregates of fossil bones. PNAS 102: 13783-13788.</ref>
* '''Extracción directa del fósil:''' Algunos científicos aseguran que el ADN se mantiene incluso millones de años, por lo que se encuentran directamente en los restos.<ref>{{cita web|url=http://www.lanacion.com.ar/Archivo/Nota.asp?nota_id=385436|título=Hallazgo argentino: el ADN subsiste millones de años|fechaacceso=27 de diciembre de 2007}}</ref>


Single primer extension (abr. SPEX) amplification was introduced in 2007 to address postmortem DNA modification damage.<ref>{{cite journal
== Véase también ==
| doi = 10.1093/nar/gkm588
* [[Genoma]]
| date = 2007
* [[Paleovirología]]
| title = Novel high-resolution characterization of ancient DNA reveals C > U-type base modification events as the sole cause of post-mortem miscoding lesions
* [[Elemento viral endógeno]]
| volume = 35
| issue = 17
== Referencias ==
| pages = 5717–28
{{listaref}}
| issn = 0305-1048
| pmid = 17715147
| pmc = 2034480
| journal = Nucleic Acids Research
| url = http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=17715147
| format = Free full text
| author1 = Brotherton, P
| author2 = Endicott, P
| author3 = Sanchez, Jj
| author4 = Beaumont, M
| author5 = Barnett, R
| author6 = Austin, J
| author7 = Cooper, A
}}</ref>


== Problems and errors ==
[[Categoría:Genealogía genética]]
aDNA may contain a large number of postmortem [[mutation]]s, increasing with time. Some regions of polynucleotide are more susceptible to this degradation so sequence data can bypass statistical filters used to check the validity of data.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.454genomics.net/downloads/news-events/geneticanalysisfromancientdna.pdf |accessdate=December 1, 2008 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl= |archivedate=January 1, 1970 }}</ref> Due to sequencing errors, great caution should be applied to interpretation of population size.<ref>{{cite journal
[[Categoría:Disciplinas auxiliares de la Arqueología]]
| doi = 10.1093/molbev/msm239
|date=Jan 2008
| title = Accounting for bias from sequencing error in population genetic estimates
| volume = 25
| issue = 1
| pages = 199–206
| issn = 0737-4038
| pmid = 17981928
| journal = Molecular Biology and Evolution
| url = http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=17981928
| format = Free full text
| author1 = Johnson, Pl
| author2 = Slatkin, M
}}</ref> Substitutions resulting from [[deamination]] cytosine residues are vastly overrepresented in the ancient DNA sequences. Miscoding of C to T and G to A accounts for the majority of errors.<ref>{{cite journal
| doi = 10.1073/pnas.0704665104
|date=Sep 2007
| title = Patterns of damage in genomic DNA sequences from a Neandertal
| volume = 104
| issue = 37
| pages = 14616–21
| issn = 0027-8424
| pmid = 17715061
| pmc = 1976210
| journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
| url = http://www.pnas.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=17715061
| format = Free full text
| author1 = Briggs, Aw
| author2 = Stenzel, U
| author3 = Johnson, Pl
| author4 = Green, Re
| author5 = Kelso, J
| author6 = Prüfer, K
| author7 = Meyer, M
| author8 = Krause, J
| author9 = Ronan, Mt
| author10 = Pääbo, S
| author11 = Lachmann, M
| displayauthors=9
| bibcode=2007PNAS..10414616B
}}</ref> Another problem with ancient DNA samples is contamination by modern human DNA and by microbial DNA (most of which is also ancient).<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1101/gr.174201.114|pmid=25081630|title=Selective enrichment of damaged DNA molecules for ancient genome sequencing|journal=Genome Research|volume=24|issue=9|pages=1543–9|year=2014|last1=Gansauge|first1=Marie-Theres|last2=Meyer|first2=Matthias|pmc=4158764}}</ref>

== "Antediluvian" DNA studies ==
The post-PCR era heralded a wave of publications as numerous research groups tried their hands at aDNA. Soon a series of incredible findings had been published, claiming authentic DNA could be extracted from specimens that were millions of years old, into the realms of what Lindahl (1993b) has labelled [[Antediluvian]] DNA. The majority of such claims were based on the retrieval of DNA from organisms preserved in [[amber]]. Insects such as stingless bees (Cano ''et al.'' 1992a; Cano ''et al.'' 1992b), termites (De Salle ''et al.'' 1992; De Salle ''et al.'' 1993), and wood gnats (De Salle and Grimaldi 1994) as well as plant ([[Hendrik Poinar|Poinar]] ''et al.'' 1993) and bacterial (Cano ''et al.'' 1994) sequences were extracted from [[Dominica]]n amber dating to the [[Oligocene]] epoch. Still older sources of Lebanese amber-encased [[weevil]]s, dating to within the Cretaceous epoch, reportedly also yielded authentic DNA (Cano ''et al.'' 1993). DNA retrieval was not limited to amber. Several sediment-preserved plant remains dating to the [[Miocene]] were successfully investigated (Golenberg ''et al.'' 1990; Golenberg 1991). Then, in 1994 and to international acclaim, Woodward ''et al.'' reported the most exciting results to date<ref name="pmid7973705">{{cite journal |author=Woodward SR|author2=Weyand NJ|author3=Bunnell M |title=DNA sequence from Cretaceous period bone fragments |journal=Science |volume=266 |issue=5188 |pages=1229–32 |date=November 1994 |pmid=7973705 |doi= 10.1126/science.7973705|bibcode = 1994Sci...266.1229W }}</ref> — mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences that had apparently been extracted from dinosaur bones dating to over 80 million years ago. When in 1995 two further studies reported dinosaur DNA sequences extracted from a Cretaceous egg (An ''et al.'' 1995; Li ''et al.'' 1995), it seemed that the field would truly revolutionize knowledge of the Earth's evolutionary past. Even these extraordinary ages were topped by the claimed retrieval of 250-million-year-old halobacterial sequences from [[Halite]].<ref name="pmid11057666">{{cite journal |author=Vreeland RH|author2=Rosenzweig WD|author3=Powers DW |title=Isolation of a 250 million-year-old halotolerant bacterium from a primary salt crystal |journal=Nature |volume=407 |issue=6806 |pages=897–900 |date=October 2000 |pmid=11057666 |doi=10.1038/35038060 }}</ref><ref name="pmid12024211">{{cite journal |author=Fish SA|author2=Shepherd TJ|author3=McGenity TJ|author4=Grant WD |title=Recovery of 16S ribosomal RNA gene fragments from ancient halite |journal=Nature |volume=417 |issue=6887 |pages=432–6 |date=May 2002 |pmid=12024211 |doi=10.1038/417432a |bibcode = 2002Natur.417..432F }}</ref>

Unfortunately, the golden days{{peacock-inline|date=March 2016}} of antediluvian DNA did not last. A critical review of ancient DNA literature through the development of the field highlights that few studies after about 2002 have succeeded in amplifying DNA from remains older than several hundred thousand years.<ref name="pmid12702808">{{cite journal |author=Willerslev E |title=Diverse plant and animal genetic records from Holocene and Pleistocene sediments |journal=Science |volume=300 |issue=5620 |pages=791–5 |date=May 2003 |pmid=12702808 |doi=10.1126/science.1084114 |name-list-format=vanc |author2=Hansen AJ |author3=Binladen J |display-authors=3 |last4=Brand |first4=TB |last5=Gilbert |first5=MT |last6=Shapiro |first6=B |last7=Bunce |first7=M |last8=Wiuf |first8=C |last9=Gilichinsky |first9=DA|bibcode = 2003Sci...300..791W }}</ref> A greater appreciation for the risks of environmental contamination and studies on the chemical stability of DNA have resulted in concerns being raised over previous reported results. The Dinosaur DNA was later revealed to be human Y-chromosome,<ref name="pmid7605504">{{cite journal |author=Zischler H|author2=Höss M|author3=Handt O|author4=von Haeseler A|author5=van der Kuyl AC|author6=Goudsmit J |title=Detecting dinosaur DNA |journal=Science |volume=268 |issue=5214 |pages=1192–3; author reply 1194 |date=May 1995 |pmid=7605504 |doi=10.1126/science.7605504 }}</ref> while the DNA reported from encapsulated halobacteria has been criticized based on its similarity to modern bacteria, which hints at contamination.<ref name="pmid15719062">{{cite journal |author=Nicholls H |journal=PLOS Biology |volume=3 |issue=2 |page=e56 |date=February 2005 |pmid=15719062 |doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.0030056 |url=http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pbio.0030056 |title=Ancient DNA Comes of Age |pmc=548952}}</ref> A 2007 study also suggest that these bacterial DNA samples may not have survived from ancient times but may instead be the product of long-term, low-level metabolic activity.<ref name="pmid17728401">{{cite journal |author=Johnson SS|author2=Hebsgaard MB|author3=Christensen TR|author4=Mastepanov M|author5=Nielsen R|author6=Munch K|author7=Brand T|author8=Gilbert MT|author9=Zuber MT|author10=Bunce M|author11=Rønn R|author12=Gilichinsky D|author13=Froese D|author14=Willerslev E |title=Ancient bacteria show evidence of DNA repair |journal=PNAS |volume=104 |issue=36 |pages=14401–5 |date=September 2007 |pmid=17728401 |doi=10.1073/pnas.0706787104 |url=http://www.pnas.org/content/104/36/14401.long|bibcode = 2007PNAS..10414401J |pmc=1958816}}</ref>

== Ancient DNA studies ==
Despite the problems associated with 'antediluvian' DNA, a wide and ever-increasing range of aDNA sequences have now been published from a range of animal and plant [[Taxon|taxa]]. Tissues examined include artificially or naturally mummified animal remains,<ref name="pmid6504142" /><ref name="pmid2755507">{{cite journal |author=Thomas RH|author2=Schaffner W|author3=Wilson AC|author4=Pääbo S |title=DNA phylogeny of the extinct marsupial wolf |journal=Nature |volume=340 |issue=6233 |pages=465–7 |date=August 1989 |pmid=2755507 |doi=10.1038/340465a0 |bibcode = 1989Natur.340..465T }}</ref> bone (c.f. Hagelberg ''et al.'' 1989; Cooper ''et al.'' 1992; Hagelberg ''et al.'' 1994),<ref name="pmid7991628">{{cite journal |author=Hänni C|author2=Laudet V|author3=Stehelin D|author4=Taberlet P |title=Tracking the origins of the cave bear (Ursus spelaeus) by mitochondrial DNA sequencing |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume=91 |issue=25 |pages=12336–40 |date=December 1994 |pmid=7991628 |pmc=45432 |doi= 10.1073/pnas.91.25.12336|bibcode = 1994PNAS...9112336H }}</ref> paleofaeces,<ref name="pmid9665881">{{cite journal |author=Poinar HN |title=Molecular coproscopy: dung and diet of the extinct ground sloth Nothrotheriops shastensis |journal=Science |volume=281 |issue=5375 |pages=402–6 |date=July 1998 |pmid=9665881 |doi= 10.1126/science.281.5375.402|name-list-format=vanc |author2=Hofreiter M |author3=Spaulding WG |display-authors=3 |last4=Martin |first4=PS |last5=Stankiewicz |first5=BA |last6=Bland |first6=H |last7=Evershed |first7=RP |last8=Possnert |first8=G |last9=Pääbo |first9=S|bibcode = 1998Sci...281..402P }}</ref><ref name="pmid11123610">{{cite journal |author=Hofreiter M |title=A molecular analysis of ground sloth diet through the last glaciation |journal=Mol. Ecol. |volume=9 |issue=12 |pages=1975–84 |date=December 2000 |pmid=11123610 |doi= 10.1046/j.1365-294X.2000.01106.x|name-list-format=vanc |author2=Poinar HN |author3=Spaulding WG |display-authors=3 |last4=Bauer |first4=K. |last5=Martin |first5=P. S. |last6=Possnert |first6=G. |last7=Paabo |first7=S.}}</ref> alcohol preserved specimens (Junqueira ''et al.'' 2002), rodent middens,<ref name="pmid11975707">{{cite journal |author=Kuch M|author2=Rohland N|author3=Betancourt JL|author4=Latorre C|author5=Steppan S|author6=Poinar HN |title=Molecular analysis of an 11,700-year-old rodent midden from the Atacama Desert, Chile |journal=Mol. Ecol. |volume=11 |issue=5 |pages=913–24 |date=May 2002 |pmid=11975707 |doi= 10.1046/j.1365-294X.2002.01492.x}}</ref> dried plant remains (Goloubinoff ''et al.'' 1993; Dumolin-Lapegue ''et al.'' 1999) and recently, extractions of animal and plant DNA directly from [[soil]] samples.<ref name="pmid15875564">{{cite journal |author=Willerslev E|author2=Cooper A |title=Ancient DNA |journal=[[Proceedings of the Royal Society B]] |volume=272 |issue=1558 |pages=3–16 |date=January 2005 |pmid=15875564 |pmc=1634942 |doi=10.1098/rspb.2004.2813 }}</ref> In June 2013, a group of researchers announced that they had sequenced the DNA of a 560–780 thousand year old horse, using material extracted from a leg bone found buried in [[permafrost]] in Canada's [[Yukon]] territory.<ref name="Hayden_2013">{{cite news|url=http://www.nature.com/news/first-horses-arose-4-million-years-ago-1.13261 |title=First horses arose 4 million years ago |author=Erika Check Hayden |publisher=Nature |date=26 June 2013 |doi=10.1038/nature.2013.13261}}</ref>
In 2013, a German team reconstructed the [[Mitochondrial DNA|mitochondrial genome]] of an ''[[Ursus deningeri]]'' more than 300,000 years old, proving that authentic ancient DNA can be preserved for hundreds of thousand years outside of [[permafrost]].<ref name="PNAS-2013">{{cite journal |author=Dabney|title=Complete mitochondrial genome sequence of a Middle Pleistocene cave bear reconstructed from ultrashort DNA fragments |date=2013 |journal=[[PNAS]] |volume=110 |issue=39 |pages=15758–15763 |url=http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2013/09/04/1314445110.abstract |doi=10.1073/pnas.1314445110 |accessdate=18 January 2014 |display-authors=etal|bibcode = 2013PNAS..11015758D }}</ref>

== Ancient DNA studies on human remains ==
Due to the considerable [[anthropology|anthropological]], [[archaeology|archaeological]], and [[public interest]] directed toward human remains, it is only natural that they have received a similar amount of attention from the DNA community. Due to their obvious signs of [[comparative anatomy|morphological]] preservation, many studies utilised mummified tissue as a source of ancient human DNA. Examples include both naturally preserved specimens, for example, those preserved in ice, such as the [[Ötzi the Iceman]] (Handt ''et al.'' 1994), or through rapid [[desiccation]], such as high-altitude mummies from Andes (c.f. [[Svante Pääbo|Pääbo]] 1986; Montiel ''et al.'' 2001) as well as various sources of artificially preserved tissue (such as the chemically treated mummies of ancient Egypt).<ref name="pmid7806242">{{cite journal |author=Hänni C|author2=Laudet V|author3=Coll J|author4=Stehelin D |title=An unusual mitochondrial DNA sequence variant from an Egyptian mummy |journal=Genomics |volume=22 |issue=2 |pages=487–9 |date=July 1994 |pmid=7806242 |doi=10.1006/geno.1994.1417 }}</ref> However, mummified remains are a limited resource, and the majority of human aDNA studies have focused on extracting DNA from two sources that are much more common in the [[archaeological record]] – [[bone]] and [[Tooth|teeth]]. Recently, several other sources have also yielded DNA, including [[coprolite|paleofaeces]] ([[Hendrik Poinar|Poinar]] ''et al.'' 2001) and [[hair]] (Baker ''et al.'' 2001, Gilbert ''et al.'' 2004). Contamination remains a major problem when working on ancient human material. In November 2015, scientists reported finding a 110,000-year-old fossil tooth containing DNA from [[Denisova|Denisovan hominin]], an [[extinct]] [[species]] of [[human]] in the genus [[Homo]].<ref name="NYT-20151116">{{cite news |last=Zimmer |first=Carl |authorlink=Carl Zimmer |title=In a Tooth, DNA From Some Very Old Cousins, the Denisovans |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/17/science/in-a-tooth-dna-from-some-very-old-cousins-the-denisovans.html |date=16 November 2015 |work=[[New York Times]] |accessdate=16 November 2015 }}</ref><ref name="PNAS-20151111">{{cite journal |last1=Sawyer |first1=Susanna |last2=Renaud |first2=Gabriel |last3=Viola |first3=Bence |last4=Hublin
|first4=Jean-Jacques |last5=Gansauge |first5=Marie-Theres |last6=Shunkov |first6=Michael V. |last7=Derevianko |first7=Anatoly P. |last8=Prüfer |first8=Kay |last9=Kelso |first9=Janet |last10=Pääbo |first10=Svante |title=Nuclear and mitochondrial DNA sequences from two Denisovan individuals |url=http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2015/11/11/1519905112 |date=11 November 2015 |journal=[[PNAS]] |doi=10.1073/pnas.1519905112 |accessdate=16 November 2015 }}</ref>

=== Pathogen and microorganism aDNA analyses using human remains ===
The use of degraded human samples in aDNA analyses has not been limited to the amplification of human DNA. It is reasonable to assume that for a period of time postmortem, DNA may survive from any microorganisms present in the specimen at death. These include not only pathogens present at the time of death (either the cause of death or long-term infections) but [[Commensalism|commensals]] and other associated microbes. Despite several studies that have reported limited preservation of such DNA, for example, the lack of preservation of [[Helicobacter pylori]] in ethanol-preserved specimens dating to the 18th century,<ref name="pmid11113876">{{cite journal |author=Barnes I|author2=Holton J|author3=Vaira D|author4=Spigelman M|author5=Thomas MG |title=An assessment of the long-term preservation of the DNA of a bacterial pathogen in ethanol-preserved archival material |journal=J. Pathol. |volume=192 |issue=4 |pages=554–9 |date=December 2000 |pmid=11113876 |doi=10.1002/1096-9896(2000)9999:9999<::AID-PATH768>3.0.CO;2-C }}</ref> over 45 published studies report the successful retrieval of ancient [[pathogen]] DNA from samples dating back to over 5,000 years old in humans and as long as 17,000 years ago in other species. As well as the usual sources of mummified tissue, bones and teeth, such studies have also examined a range of other tissue samples, including calcified [[Pleural cavity|pleura]] (Donoghue ''et al.'' 1998), tissue embedded in [[Paraffin wax|paraffin]],<ref name="pmid9448313">{{cite journal |author=Jackson PJ |title=PCR analysis of tissue samples from the 1979 Sverdlovsk anthrax victims: The presence of multiple Bacillus anthracis strains in different victims |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume=95 |issue=3 |pages=1224–9 |date=February 1998 |pmid=9448313 |pmc=18726 |doi= 10.1073/pnas.95.3.1224|name-list-format=vanc |author2=Hugh-Jones ME |author3=Adair DM |display-authors=3 |last4=Green |first4=G |last5=Hill |first5=KK |last6=Kuske |first6=CR |last7=Grinberg |first7=LM |last8=Abramova |first8=FA |last9=Keim |first9=P|bibcode = 1998PNAS...95.1224J }}</ref><ref name="pmid11226311">{{cite journal |author=Basler CF |title=Sequence of the 1918 pandemic influenza virus nonstructural gene (NS) segment and characterization of recombinant viruses bearing the 1918 NS genes |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume=98 |issue=5 |pages=2746–51 |date=February 2001 |pmid=11226311 |pmc=30210 |doi=10.1073/pnas.031575198 |name-list-format=vanc |author2=Reid AH |author3=Dybing JK |display-authors=3 |last4=Janczewski |first4=TA |last5=Fanning |first5=TG |last6=Zheng |first6=H |last7=Salvatore |first7=M |last8=Perdue |first8=ML |last9=Swayne |first9=DE|bibcode = 2001PNAS...98.2746B }}</ref> and formalin-fixed tissue.<ref name="pmid9065404">{{cite journal |author=Taubenberger JK|author2=Reid AH|author3=Krafft AE|author4=Bijwaard KE|author5=Fanning TG |title=Initial genetic characterization of the 1918 "Spanish" influenza virus |journal=Science |volume=275 |issue=5307 |pages=1793–6 |date=March 1997 |pmid=9065404 |doi= 10.1126/science.275.5307.1793}}</ref>

== Researchers specializing in ancient DNA ==
*[[Joachim Burger]]
*[[Marcus Thomas Pius Gilbert|M. Thomas P. Gilbert]]
*[[Johannes Krause]]
*[[Svante Pääbo]]
*[[Hendrik Poinar]]
*[[Beth Shapiro]]
*[[Mark G. Thomas]]
*[[Eske Willerslev]]

== See also ==
{{Col-begin}}
{{Col-3}}
* [[Archaeogenetics]]
* [[Archaeogenetics of the Near East]]
* [[Dinosaur mummy]]
* [[Genetics and archaeogenetics of South Asia]]
* [[Genetic history of Africa]]
* [[Genetic history of Europe]]
* [[Genetic history of indigenous peoples of the Americas]]
* [[Genetic history of Italy]]
* [[Genetic history of North Africa]]
* [[Genetic history of the Iberian Peninsula]]
{{Col-3}}
* [[Genetic history of the British Isles]]
* [[Human mitochondrial DNA haplogroups]]
* [[Human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup]]
* [[List of DNA tested mummies]]
* [[List of genetic results derived from historical figures]]
* [[Molecular paleontology]]
* [[Paleogenetics]]
* [[Phylogenetic tree]]
* [[Tyrannosaurus#Soft tissue]]
{{Col-3}}
{{Portal|Molecular Anthropology|Evolutionary biology}}
{{Col-end}}

== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==Bibliography==<!-- Auk114:126. ContribZool76:87. CurrBiol13:1150. SysBiodivers4:133. -->
*An C-C, Li Y, Zhu Y-X. . 1995. Molecular cloning and sequencing of the 18S rDNA from specialized dinosaur egg fossil found in Xixia Henan, China. Acta Sci Nat Univ Pekinensis 31:140–147
*Baker LE. 2001. Mitochondrial DNA haplotype and sequence analysis of historic Choctaw and Menominee hair shaft samples. PhD Thesis. University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1073/pnas.031575198 | author = Basler CF | last2 = Reid | date = 2001 | first2 = AH | last3 = Dybing | first3 = JK | last4 = Janczewski | first4 = TA | last5 = Fanning | first5 = TG | last6 = Zheng | first6 = H | last7 = Salvatore | first7 = M | last8 = Perdue | first8 = ML | last9 = Swayne | first9 = DE | displayauthors=8| title = Sequence of the 1918 pandemic influenza virus nonstructural gene (NS) segment and characterization of recombinant viruses bearing the 1918 NS genes | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | volume = 98 | issue = 5| pages = 2746–2751 | pmid = 11226311 | pmc = 30210 |bibcode = 2001PNAS...98.2746B }}
*{{cite journal | author = Cano RJ| author2 = Poinar H| author3 = Poinar Jr. GO | year = 1992a | title = Isolation and partial characterisation of DNA from the bee Problebeia dominicana (Apidae:Hymenoptera) in 25–40 million year old amber | journal = Med Sci Res | volume = 20 | pages = 249–251 }}
*{{cite journal | author = Cano RJ| author2 = Poinar HN| author3 = Roubik DW| author4 = Poinar Jr. GO | year = 1992b | title = Enzymatic amplification and nucleotide sequencing of portions of the 18S rRNA gene of the bee Problebeia dominicana (Apidae:Hymenoptera) isolated from 25–40 million year old Dominican amber | journal = Med Sci Res | volume = 20 | pages = 619–622 }}
*{{cite journal | author = Cano RJ| author2 = Borucki MK| author3 = Higby-Schweitzer M| author4 = Poinar HN| author5 = Poinar GO Jr.| author6 = Pollard KJ | date = 1994 | title = Bacillus DNA in fossil bees: an ancient symbiosis? | journal = Appl Environ Microbiol | volume = 60 | pages = 2164–167 }}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1073/pnas.89.18.8741 | author = Cooper A | author2 = Mourer-Chauviré C | author3 = Chambers GK | author4 = von Haeseler A | author5 = Wilson A | author6 = Pääbo S | date = 1992 | title = Independent origins of New Zealand moas and kiwis | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | volume = 89 | issue = 18| pages = 8741–8744 | pmid = 1528888 | pmc = 49996 |bibcode = 1992PNAS...89.8741C }}
*Díaz M.L. and Rodríguez E.L. The History of the Infectious Diseases is Written in the aDNA: Reality or Fiction. ''Bol. Int. Cienc. Básica.'' Vol.3, No.3:68–76. (Article N° BICB-08140200)
*Donoghue HD, Spigelman M, Zias J, Gernaey-Child AM, Minnikin DE. 1998. Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex DNA in calcified pleura from remains 1400 years old. Lett Appl Microbiol 27:265–269
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1046/j.1365-294x.1999.00788.x | author = Dumolin-Lapegue S | author2 = Pemonge H-M | author3 = Gielly L | author4 = Taberlet P | author5 = Petit RJ | date = 1999 | title = Amplification of oak DNA from ancient and modern wood | journal = Mol. Ecol. | volume = 8 | issue = 12| pages = 2137–2140 | pmid = 10632865 }}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1038/417432a | author = Fish SA | author2 = Shepherd TJ | author3 = McGenity TJ| author4 = Grant WD | date = 2002 | title = Recovery of 16S ribosomal RNA gene fragments from ancient halite | journal = Nature | volume = 417 | issue = 6887| pages = 432–436 | pmid = 12024211 |bibcode = 2002Natur.417..432F }}
*{{cite journal | author = Gilbert MTP, Wilson AS, Bunce M, Hansen AJ, Willerslev E, Shapiro B, Higham TFG, Richards MP, O'Connell TC, Tobin DJ, Janaway RC, Cooper A | year = 2004 | title = Ancient mitochondrial DNA from hair | url = | journal = Current Biology | volume = 14 | issue = | pages = R463–464 | doi=10.1016/j.cub.2004.06.008}}
*{{cite journal | author = Golenberg EM | year = 1991 | title = Amplification and analysis of Miocene plant fossil DNA | url = | journal = Philos Trans R Soc Lond B | volume = 333 | issue = | pages = 419–26 | doi=10.1098/rstb.1991.0092}}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1038/344656a0 | author = Golenberg EM | author2 = Giannasi DE | author3 = Clegg MT| author4 = Smiley CJ | author5 = Durbin M | author6 = Henderson D | author7 = Zurawski G | date = 1990 | title = Chloroplast DNA sequence from a Miocene Magnolia species | journal = Nature | volume = 344 | issue = 6267| pages = 656–658 | pmid = 2325772 |bibcode = 1990Natur.344..656G }}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1073/pnas.90.5.1997 | author = Goloubinoff P | author2 = Pääbo S | author3 = Wilson AC | date = 1993 | title = Evolution of maize inferred from sequence diversity of an Adh2 gene segment from archaeological specimens | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | volume = 90 | issue = 5| pages = 1997–2001 | pmid = 8446621 | pmc = 46007 |bibcode = 1993PNAS...90.1997G }}
*{{cite journal | author = Hagelberg E| author2 = Sykes B| author3 = Hedges R | date = 1989 | title = Ancient bone DNA amplified | journal = Nature | volume = 342 | issue =6249 | page = 485 |pmid=2586623|bibcode=1989Natur.342..485H|doi=10.1038/342485a0}}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1038/370333b0 | author = Hagelberg E | author2 = Thomas MG | author3 = Cook Jr. CE| author4 = Sher AV | author5 = Baryshnikov GF| author6 = Lister AM | date = 1994 | title = DNA from ancient mammoth bones | journal = Nature | volume = 370 | issue = 6488| pages = 333–334 | pmid = 8047136 |bibcode = 1994Natur.370R.333H }}
*{{cite journal | author = Handt O | year = 1994b | title = Molecular genetic analyses of the Tyrolean Ice Man | journal = Science | volume = 264 | issue = 5166| pages = 1775–1778 | pmid = 8209259 | name-list-format = vanc | author2 = Richards M | author3 = Trommsdorf M | author4 = Kilger C | author5 = Simanainen J | author6 = Georgiev O | author7 = Bauer K | author8 = Stone A | author9 = Hedges R | doi = 10.1126/science.8209259 |bibcode = 1994Sci...264.1775H }}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1046/j.0269-283x.2002.00336.x | author = Junqueira ACM | author2 = Lessinger AC | author3 = Azeredo-Espin AML | date = 2002 | title = Methods for the recovery of mitochondrial DNA sequences from museum specimens of myiasis-causing flies | journal = Med Vet Entomol | volume = 16 | issue = 1| pages = 39–45 | pmid = 11963980 }}
*{{cite journal | author = Li Y, An C-C, Zhu Y-X | year = 1995 | title = DNA isolation and sequence analysis of dinosaur DNA from Cretaceous dinosaur egg in Xixia Henan, China | url = | journal = Acta Sci Nat Univ Pekinensis | volume = 31 | issue = | pages = 148–152 }}
*{{cite journal | author = Lindahl T | date = 1993 | title = Recovery of antediluvian DNA | journal = Nature | volume = 365 | issue = 6448| page = 700|doi=10.1038/365700a0 |bibcode = 1993Natur.365..700L }}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1353/hub.2001.0069 | author = Montiel R | author2 = Malgosa A | author3 = Francalacci P | date = 2001 | title = Authenticating ancient human mitochondrial DNA | journal = [[Hum Biol]] | volume = 73 | issue = 5| pages = 689–713 }}
*{{cite journal | author = Pääbo S | year = 1985a | title = Preservation of DNA in ancient Egyptian mummies | journal = J Archeol Sci | volume = 12 | issue = 6| pages = 411–417 | doi = 10.1016/0305-4403(85)90002-0 }}
*{{cite journal | author = Pääbo S | year = 1985b | title = Molecular cloning of ancient Egyptian mummy DNA | journal = Nature | volume = 314 | issue = 6012| pages = 644–645 | pmid = 3990798 | doi=10.1038/314644a0|bibcode = 1985Natur.314..644P }}
*Pääbo S. 1986. Molecular genetic investigations of ancient human remains. Cold Spring Harbour Symp Quant Biol. 51:441–446
*{{cite journal | author = Poinar H| author2 = Cano R| author3 = Poinar G | date = 1993 | title = DNA from an extinct plant | journal = Nature | volume = 363 | issue = 6431| page = 677|doi=10.1038/363677a0 |bibcode = 1993Natur.363..677P }}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1073/pnas.061014798 | author = Poinar HN | date = 2001 | title = A molecular analysis of dietary diversity for three archaic Native Americans | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | volume = 98 | issue = 8| pages = 4317–4322 | pmid = 11296282 | pmc = 31832 | name-list-format = vanc | author2 = Küch M | author3 = Sobolik KD | author4 = Barnes I | author5 = Stankiewicz AB | author6 = Kuder T | author7 = Spaulding WG | author8 = Bryant VM | author9 = Cooper A |bibcode = 2001PNAS...98.4317P }}
*Rizzi E, Lari M, Gigli E, De Bellis G, Caramelli D, 2012, Ancient DNA studies: new perspectives on old samples, Genetic Selection and Evolution volume,44: 21 doi:10.1186/1297-9686-44-21
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1038/35038060 | author = Vreeland RH | author2 = Rozenwieg WD | author3 = Powers DW | date = 2000 | title = Isolation of a 250 million-year-old halotolerant bacterium from a primary salt crystal | journal = Nature | volume = 407 | issue = 6806| pages = 897–900 | pmid = 11057666 }}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1098/rspb.2004.2813 | author = Willerslev E | author2 = Cooper A | date = 2005 | title = Ancient DNA | journal = [[Proceedings of the Royal Society B]] | volume = 272 | issue = 1558| pages = 3–16 | pmid = 15875564 | pmc = 1634942 }}

== Conferences ==
* The 1st International Ancient DNA Conference was held at St John's College, Nottingham, England, from July 8 to July 10, 1991.
* The 2nd International Ancient DNA Conference was held at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C., USA, from October 7 to October 9, 1993.
* The 3rd International Ancient DNA Conference was held at Oxford University, Oxford, England, from July 21 to July 22, 1995.
* The 4th International Ancient DNA Conference was held at the Georg-August University, Göttingen, Germany, from June 5 to June 7, 1997.
*[http://members.chello.nl/jperk/Ancient%20DNA%205.pdf] – The 5th International Ancient DNA Conference was held at the University of Manchester, Manchester, England, from July 12 to July 14, 2000.
* The 6th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules was held at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Tel-Aviv and Rehovot, Israel, from July 21 to July 25, 2002.
* The 7th International Conference on Ancient DNA & Associated Biomolecules was held at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia, from July 10 to July 17, 2004.
*[http://csk.umed.lodz.pl/~dmb/DNA8/doc/?plik=inv] – The 8th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules was held at the Medical University of Łódź, Łódź, Poland, from October 16 to October 19, 2006.
* The 9th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules was held at the University of Naples, Naples & Pompeii, Italy, from October 19 to October 22, 2008.
*[http://www.adna2010.com] – The 10th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules was held at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany, from October 10 to October 13, 2010.
*[http://www.unifi.it/dbalan/CMpro-v-p-166.html] A day with ancient DNA held at the University of Florence, Florence, Italy, 22 March 2012.

==Read more==
*[http://www.standardtimes.com/daily/03-97/03-09-97/a09wn056.htm British teacher finds long-lost relative: 9,000-year-old man] – mtDNA analysis.
*[http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/98/23/13460 Genetic characterization of the body attributed to the evangelist Luke] (PDF) better link http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/98/23/13460 – mtDNA
*[http://www.egyptologyonline.com/using_dna.htm Unravelling the mummy mystery – using DNA] – no data on YDNA only mtDNA


== External links ==
*[http://isogg.org/famousdna.htm Famous mtDNA], isogg.org
*[http://www.isogg.org/ancientdna.htm Ancient mtDNA], isogg.org
*[http://www.y-str.org/p/ancient-dna.html Ancient DNA], y-str.org
*[http://www.friendsofpast.org/earliest-americans/map.html Evidence of the Past: A Map and Status of Ancient Remains] – samples from USA no sequence data here.

Revisión del 21:14 28 mar 2016

Cross-linked DNA extracted from the 4,000-year-old liver of the ancient Egyptian priest Nekht-Ankh.

Ancient DNA is DNA isolated from ancient specimens.[1]​ It can be also loosely described as any DNA recovered from biological samples that have not been preserved specifically for later DNA analyses. Examples include the analysis of DNA recovered from archaeological and historical skeletal material, mummified tissues, archival collections of non-frozen medical specimens, preserved plant remains, ice and permafrost cores, Holocene plankton in marine and lake sediments, and so on. Unlike modern genetic analyses, ancient DNA studies are characterised by low quality DNA. This places limits on what analyses can achieve. Furthermore, due to degradation of the DNA molecules, a process which correlates loosely with factors such as time, temperature, and presence of free water, upper limits exist beyond which no DNA is deemed likely to survive. Allentoft et al. (2012) tried to calculate this limit by studying the decay of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA in Moa bones. The DNA degrades in an exponential decay process. According to their model, mitochondrial DNA is degraded to an average length of 1 base pair after 6,830,000 years at −5 °C.[2]​ The decay kinetics have been measured by accelerated aging experiments further displaying the strong influence of storage temperature and humidity on DNA decay.[3]​ Nuclear DNA degrades at least twice as fast as mtDNA. As such, early studies that reported recovery of much older DNA, for example from Cretaceous dinosaur remains, may have stemmed from contamination of the sample.

History of ancient DNA studies

The first study of what would come to be called aDNA came in 1984, when Russ Higuchi and colleagues at Berkeley reported that traces of DNA from a museum specimen of the Quagga not only remained in the specimen over 150 years after the death of the individual, but could be extracted and sequenced.[4]​ Over the next two years, through investigations into natural and artificially mummified specimens, Svante Pääbo confirmed that this phenomenon was not limited to relatively recent museum specimens but could apparently be replicated in a range of mummified human samples that dated as far back as several thousand years (Pääbo 1985a; Pääbo 1985b; Pääbo 1986). Nevertheless, the laborious processes that were required at that time to sequence such DNA (through bacterial cloning) were an effective brake on the development of the field of ancient DNA (aDNA). However, with the development of the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) in the late 1980s the field began to progress rapidly.[5][6]

Double primer PCR amplification of aDNA (jumping-PCR) can produce highly skewed and non-authentic sequence artifacts. Multiple primer, nested PCR strategy was used to overcome those shortcomings.

Single primer extension (abr. SPEX) amplification was introduced in 2007 to address postmortem DNA modification damage.[7]

Problems and errors

aDNA may contain a large number of postmortem mutations, increasing with time. Some regions of polynucleotide are more susceptible to this degradation so sequence data can bypass statistical filters used to check the validity of data.[8]​ Due to sequencing errors, great caution should be applied to interpretation of population size.[9]​ Substitutions resulting from deamination cytosine residues are vastly overrepresented in the ancient DNA sequences. Miscoding of C to T and G to A accounts for the majority of errors.[10]​ Another problem with ancient DNA samples is contamination by modern human DNA and by microbial DNA (most of which is also ancient).[11]

"Antediluvian" DNA studies

The post-PCR era heralded a wave of publications as numerous research groups tried their hands at aDNA. Soon a series of incredible findings had been published, claiming authentic DNA could be extracted from specimens that were millions of years old, into the realms of what Lindahl (1993b) has labelled Antediluvian DNA. The majority of such claims were based on the retrieval of DNA from organisms preserved in amber. Insects such as stingless bees (Cano et al. 1992a; Cano et al. 1992b), termites (De Salle et al. 1992; De Salle et al. 1993), and wood gnats (De Salle and Grimaldi 1994) as well as plant (Poinar et al. 1993) and bacterial (Cano et al. 1994) sequences were extracted from Dominican amber dating to the Oligocene epoch. Still older sources of Lebanese amber-encased weevils, dating to within the Cretaceous epoch, reportedly also yielded authentic DNA (Cano et al. 1993). DNA retrieval was not limited to amber. Several sediment-preserved plant remains dating to the Miocene were successfully investigated (Golenberg et al. 1990; Golenberg 1991). Then, in 1994 and to international acclaim, Woodward et al. reported the most exciting results to date[12]​ — mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences that had apparently been extracted from dinosaur bones dating to over 80 million years ago. When in 1995 two further studies reported dinosaur DNA sequences extracted from a Cretaceous egg (An et al. 1995; Li et al. 1995), it seemed that the field would truly revolutionize knowledge of the Earth's evolutionary past. Even these extraordinary ages were topped by the claimed retrieval of 250-million-year-old halobacterial sequences from Halite.[13][14]

Unfortunately, the golden daysPlantilla:Peacock-inline of antediluvian DNA did not last. A critical review of ancient DNA literature through the development of the field highlights that few studies after about 2002 have succeeded in amplifying DNA from remains older than several hundred thousand years.[15]​ A greater appreciation for the risks of environmental contamination and studies on the chemical stability of DNA have resulted in concerns being raised over previous reported results. The Dinosaur DNA was later revealed to be human Y-chromosome,[16]​ while the DNA reported from encapsulated halobacteria has been criticized based on its similarity to modern bacteria, which hints at contamination.[17]​ A 2007 study also suggest that these bacterial DNA samples may not have survived from ancient times but may instead be the product of long-term, low-level metabolic activity.[18]

Ancient DNA studies

Despite the problems associated with 'antediluvian' DNA, a wide and ever-increasing range of aDNA sequences have now been published from a range of animal and plant taxa. Tissues examined include artificially or naturally mummified animal remains,[4][19]​ bone (c.f. Hagelberg et al. 1989; Cooper et al. 1992; Hagelberg et al. 1994),[20]​ paleofaeces,[21][22]​ alcohol preserved specimens (Junqueira et al. 2002), rodent middens,[23]​ dried plant remains (Goloubinoff et al. 1993; Dumolin-Lapegue et al. 1999) and recently, extractions of animal and plant DNA directly from soil samples.[24]​ In June 2013, a group of researchers announced that they had sequenced the DNA of a 560–780 thousand year old horse, using material extracted from a leg bone found buried in permafrost in Canada's Yukon territory.[25]​ In 2013, a German team reconstructed the mitochondrial genome of an Ursus deningeri more than 300,000 years old, proving that authentic ancient DNA can be preserved for hundreds of thousand years outside of permafrost.[26]

Ancient DNA studies on human remains

Due to the considerable anthropological, archaeological, and public interest directed toward human remains, it is only natural that they have received a similar amount of attention from the DNA community. Due to their obvious signs of morphological preservation, many studies utilised mummified tissue as a source of ancient human DNA. Examples include both naturally preserved specimens, for example, those preserved in ice, such as the Ötzi the Iceman (Handt et al. 1994), or through rapid desiccation, such as high-altitude mummies from Andes (c.f. Pääbo 1986; Montiel et al. 2001) as well as various sources of artificially preserved tissue (such as the chemically treated mummies of ancient Egypt).[27]​ However, mummified remains are a limited resource, and the majority of human aDNA studies have focused on extracting DNA from two sources that are much more common in the archaeological recordbone and teeth. Recently, several other sources have also yielded DNA, including paleofaeces (Poinar et al. 2001) and hair (Baker et al. 2001, Gilbert et al. 2004). Contamination remains a major problem when working on ancient human material. In November 2015, scientists reported finding a 110,000-year-old fossil tooth containing DNA from Denisovan hominin, an extinct species of human in the genus Homo.[28][29]

Pathogen and microorganism aDNA analyses using human remains

The use of degraded human samples in aDNA analyses has not been limited to the amplification of human DNA. It is reasonable to assume that for a period of time postmortem, DNA may survive from any microorganisms present in the specimen at death. These include not only pathogens present at the time of death (either the cause of death or long-term infections) but commensals and other associated microbes. Despite several studies that have reported limited preservation of such DNA, for example, the lack of preservation of Helicobacter pylori in ethanol-preserved specimens dating to the 18th century,[30]​ over 45 published studies report the successful retrieval of ancient pathogen DNA from samples dating back to over 5,000 years old in humans and as long as 17,000 years ago in other species. As well as the usual sources of mummified tissue, bones and teeth, such studies have also examined a range of other tissue samples, including calcified pleura (Donoghue et al. 1998), tissue embedded in paraffin,[31][32]​ and formalin-fixed tissue.[33]

Researchers specializing in ancient DNA

See also

References

  1. Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics By Jonathan Pevsner ISBN 978-0-470-08585-1, ISBN 0-470-08585-1
  2. Allentoft ME; Collins M; Harker D; Haile J; Oskam CL; Hale ML; Campos PF; Samaniego JA; Gilbert MTP; Willerslev E; Zhang G; Scofield RP; Holdaway RN; Bunce M (2012). «The half-life of DNA in bone: measuring decay kinetics in 158 dated fossils». Proceedings of the Royal Society B 279 (1748): 4724-33. doi:10.1098/rspb.2012.1745. 
  3. Grass, R. N.; Heckel, R.; Puddu, M.; Paunescu, D.; Stark, W. J. (2015). «Robust Chemical Preservation of Digital Information on DNA in Silica with Error-Correcting Codes». Angewandte Chemie International Edition 54 (8): 2552-2555. doi:10.1002/anie.201411378. 
  4. a b Higuchi R; Bowman B; Freiberger M; Ryder OA; Wilson AC (1984). «DNA sequences from the quagga, an extinct member of the horse family». Nature 312 (5991): 282-4. Bibcode:1984Natur.312..282H. PMID 6504142. doi:10.1038/312282a0. 
  5. Mullis KB; Faloona FA (1987). «Specific synthesis of DNA in vitro via a polymerase-catalyzed chain reaction». Meth. Enzymol. Methods in Enzymology 155: 335-50. ISBN 978-0-12-182056-5. PMID 3431465. doi:10.1016/0076-6879(87)55023-6. 
  6. Saiki RK; Gelfand DH; Stoffel S et al. (January 1988). «Primer-directed enzymatic amplification of DNA with a thermostable DNA polymerase». Science 239 (4839): 487-91. Bibcode:1988Sci...239..487S. PMID 2448875. doi:10.1126/science.2448875.  Parámetro desconocido |name-list-format= ignorado (ayuda)
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Bibliography

Conferences

  • The 1st International Ancient DNA Conference was held at St John's College, Nottingham, England, from July 8 to July 10, 1991.
  • The 2nd International Ancient DNA Conference was held at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C., USA, from October 7 to October 9, 1993.
  • The 3rd International Ancient DNA Conference was held at Oxford University, Oxford, England, from July 21 to July 22, 1995.
  • The 4th International Ancient DNA Conference was held at the Georg-August University, Göttingen, Germany, from June 5 to June 7, 1997.
  • [1] – The 5th International Ancient DNA Conference was held at the University of Manchester, Manchester, England, from July 12 to July 14, 2000.
  • The 6th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules was held at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Tel-Aviv and Rehovot, Israel, from July 21 to July 25, 2002.
  • The 7th International Conference on Ancient DNA & Associated Biomolecules was held at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia, from July 10 to July 17, 2004.
  • [2] – The 8th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules was held at the Medical University of Łódź, Łódź, Poland, from October 16 to October 19, 2006.
  • The 9th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules was held at the University of Naples, Naples & Pompeii, Italy, from October 19 to October 22, 2008.
  • [3] – The 10th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules was held at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany, from October 10 to October 13, 2010.
  • [4] A day with ancient DNA held at the University of Florence, Florence, Italy, 22 March 2012.

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