| Literature DB >> 31036834 |
M C Stahlschmidt1,2, T C Collin3, D M Fernandes4,5, G Bar-Oz6, A Belfer-Cohen7, Z Gao8, N Jakeli9, Z Matskevich10, T Meshveliani9, J K Pritchard8,11,12, F McDermott13, R Pinhasi14.
Abstract
Metagenomic analysis is a highly promising technique in paleogenetic research that allows analysis of the complete genomic make-up of a sample. This technique has successfully been employed to archaeological sediments, but possible leaching of DNA through the sequence limits interpretation. We applied this technique to the analysis of ancient DNA (aDNA) from Late Quaternary stalagmites from two caves in Western Georgia, Melouri Cave and Solkota. Stalagmites form closed systems, limiting the effect of leaching, and can be securely dated with U-series. The analyses of the sequence data from the Melouri Cave stalagmite revealed potential contamination and low preservation of DNA. However, the two Solkota stalagmites preserved ancient DNA molecules of mammals (bear, roe deer, bats) and plants (chestnut, hazelnut, flax). The aDNA bearing layers from one of the two Solkota stalagmites were dated to between ~84 ka and ~56 ka BP by U-series. The second Solkota stalagmite contained excessive detrital clay obstructing U-series dating, but it also contained bear bones with a minimum age of ~50 BP uncalibrated years and ancient DNA molecules. The preservation of authentic ancient DNA molecules in Late Quaternary speleothems opens up a new paleogenetic archive for archaeological, paleontological and paleoenvironmental research.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31036834 PMCID: PMC6488622 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-43147-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Location of the study sites. The studied cave sites are located in Western Georgia (map created with ASTER GDEM[59]): (1) Location of Satsurblia, Solkota, Melouri and Datvi Cave; (2) Location of Dzudzuana and Kotias Klde.
Figure 2Sampling locations of the Solkota Cave stalagmites SKK 16 3 and 5 (photos taken by MCS). (A) The find spot of SKK 16 3 (red circle) next to its possible root (white arrow). Note the scarcity of sediment here. (B) Discovery location of SKK 16 5 (red circle) in a rill bed next to multiple bone remains (blue dots). (C) Stalagmite SKK 16 5 with cave bear bones at its base.
U-series data for speleothem SKK 16 3.
| Sample | 238U ppb | (230Th/238U) | (234U/238U) | (230Th/232Th) | 232Th ppb | Age ka uncorrected | Age ka corrected |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SKK16 3/17.5 | 37.083 ± 0.003 | 0.6317 ± 0.0020 | 1.1221 ± 0.0009 | 14.70 ± 0.04 | 4.8733 ± 0.0043 | 88.63 ± 0.54 | 80.26 ± 1.87 1.84 |
| SKK16 3/13.2 | 35.263 ± 0.004 | 0.6138 ± 0.0019 | 1.1245 ± 0.0014 | 148.10 ± 0.41 | 0.4466 ± 0.0030 | 84.59 ± 0.55 | 83.79 ± 0.64 0.63 |
| SKK16 3/6 | 35.34 ± 0.02 | 0.6140 ± 0.0017 | 1.1087 ± 0.0012 | 59.414 ± 0.153 | 1.1162 ± 0.0003 | 86.64 ± 0.50 | 84.57 ± 0.76 0.75 |
| SKK16 3/5.5 | 64.113 ± 0.005 | 0.6338 ± 0.0011 | 1.1156 ± 0.0010 | 19.086 ± 0.031 | 6.5056 ± 0.0012 | 89.95 ± 0.36 | 83.32 ± 1.48 1.46 |
| SKK 16 3/4 | 53.907 ± 0.003 | 0.5001 ± 0.0008 | 1.1546 ± 0.0007 | 17.157 ± 0.026 | 4.8015 ± 0.0012 | 61.07 ± 0.18 | 56.69 ± 0.95 0.94 |
| SKK16 3/1.7 | 38.183 ± 0.005 | 0.4510 ± 0.0009 | 1.1658 ± 0.0018 | 23.266 ± 0.047 | 2.2618 ± 0.0004 | 52.72 ± 0.24 | 50.02 ± 0.68 0.67 |
Parentheses denote activity ratios. Dates reported in this table are considered reliable after detrital corrections have been applied (see SI Table 1 for dates strongly affected by detrital correction and with no reliable age calculation). The following decay constants were used: 230Th: 9.1577E-6, 232Th: 4.9475E-11, 234U: 2.826E-6, 238UE 1.551E-10. The final column on the right hand side shows the ages calculated after correction for detrital thorium using a measured (230Th/232Th) value of 0.95 ± 0.1 for the detrital end-member.
Figure 3The cut stalagmite SKK 16 3 (photos taken by MCS). (A) SKK 16 3 before sampling. The stalagmite was partially cut open with a rock saw and then broken open (broken surface is to the right of the dashed blue line) to reduce contamination by the saw blade. Three dark lines stemming from hiatuses in speleothem formation can be observed at dfts of 4.5 (h1), 4.8 (h2) and 5.6 (h3) cms (black arrows). Note that hiatuses h1 and h2 combine to the right (h1, 2). (B) SKK 16 3 after sampling for DNA analysis and U-series dating. U-series samples (red, dotted line if unsuccessful analysis) and samples for DNA analysis (green, dotted line if unsuccessful analysis) were often taken in close association. Reliable U-series ages are reported next to their sampling location. Note however, that the age of 80.26 ± 1.87 ka in the same sampling locality as SKK3 is less reliable as it is out if stratigraphic order. DNA sample SKK1 was taken in the same layer as U-series sample SKK 16 3/−5.5, between hiatuses h3 and the combined hiatus h1 and h2 and dating to 83.32 ± 1.48 ka. Its age is capped by U-series ages from layers above (56.7 ± 0.95 ka) and below (84.57 ± 0.76). SKK1 may contain dust particles from the hiatus events.
Figure 4The cut stalagmite SKK 16 5 (photo taken by MCS). SKK 16 was sampled for U-series dating (red dotted line, unsuccessful analyses) and DNA analysis (green, dotted line if unsuccessful analysis), which include samples from the stalagmites as well as the incorporated bones (SKK 7 and 12 from cortical bone and SKK 10 from trabecular bone). Similar to SKK 16 3, stalagmite SKK 16 5 was also partially cut open with a rock saw and then broken open (left of the blue dashed line) and both contexts were sampled. Note the brown colour of the speleothem, indicating the presence of detrital clay, which impeded the U-series dating. However, each sample gave aDNA reads.
Figure 5Deamination frequencies in the Solkota samples (graph made by DMF). The graph presents the average deamination frequencies at the 5′ and 3′ bases for the terminals ends. Only genera exceeding a 10% deamination threshold were accepted as ancient and are presented here. Solid bars represent mammalian genera, patterned bars represent plantae.
Figure 6Genera identified by the aDNA analyses in stalagmites SKK 16 3 and 5 (photos taken by MCS). © MPI for Evolutionary Anthropology.