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Ancient DNA Damage
Authors:Jesse Dabney  Matthias Meyer  Svante P??bo
Affiliation:Department of Evolutionary Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:Under favorable conditions DNA can survive for thousands of years in the remains of dead organisms. The DNA extracted from such remains is invariably degraded to a small average size by processes that at least partly involve depurination. It also contains large amounts of deaminated cytosine residues that are accumulated toward the ends of the molecules, as well as several other lesions that are less well characterized.In living cells, DNA molecules continuously suffer chemical insults, which are countered by enzymatic repair mechanisms that maintain the integrity of the genome (Lindahl 1993). On death, these cellular repair mechanisms cease to function. As a consequence, the genome becomes exposed to the unmitigated effects of numerous factors that threaten its stability. These factors include intracellular nucleases, which are no longer sequestered in the cell and can thus gain access to DNA and degrade it, as well as microorganisms that spread in the decaying tissues. Together these factors may lead to the loss of all retrievable DNA. However, under favorable environmental conditions, for example when tissues are frozen or become desiccated quickly after death, these processes become inhibited before the complete destruction of all DNA endogenous to the organism. In these instances other destructive factors, particularly hydrolytic and oxidative processes, become limiting to the time that DNA survives in a tissue.When DNA is extracted and analyzed from ancient samples these destructive factors manifest themselves in three different ways: (i) a reduction in DNA fragment size, (ii) lesions that block the replication of the DNA molecules by polymerases, thus impeding many forms of analysis, and (iii) lesions that cause incorrect nucleotides to be incorporated when the DNA is replicated. Here, we summarize what is known about each of these forms of damage in ancient DNA.
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