Targeted enrichment of whole‐genome SNPs from highly burned skeletal remains

Author:

Emery Matthew V.123,Bolhofner Katelyn45,Spake Laure1,Ghafoor Suhail3,Versoza Cyril J.36,Rawls Erin M.6,Winingear Stevie2,Buikstra Jane E.34ORCID,Loreille Odile7,Fulginiti Laura C.28ORCID,Stone Anne C.234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology Binghamton University Binghamton New York USA

2. School of Human Evolution and Social Change Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

3. Center for Evolution and Medicine Arizona State University, Life Sciences C Tempe Arizona USA

4. Center for Bioarchaeology Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

5. School of Interdisciplinary Forensics Arizona State University Glendale Arizona USA

6. School of Life Sciences Arizona State University, Life Sciences C Tempe Arizona USA

7. FBI Laboratory, DNA Support Unit Quantico Virginia USA

8. Maricopa County Office of the Medical Examiner Phoenix Arizona USA

Abstract

AbstractGenetic assessment of highly incinerated and/or degraded human skeletal material is a persistent challenge in forensic DNA analysis, including identifying victims of mass disasters. Few studies have investigated the impact of thermal degradation on whole‐genome single‐nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) quality and quantity using next‐generation sequencing (NGS). We present whole‐genome SNP data obtained from the bones and teeth of 27 fire victims using two DNA extraction techniques. Extracts were converted to double‐stranded DNA libraries then enriched for whole‐genome SNPs using unpublished biotinylated RNA baits and sequenced on an Illumina NextSeq 550 platform. Raw reads were processed using the EAGER (Efficient Ancient Genome Reconstruction) pipeline, and the SNPs filtered and called using FreeBayes and GATK (v. 3.8). Mixed‐effects modeling of the data suggest that SNP variability and preservation is predominantly determined by skeletal element and burn category, and not by extraction type. Whole‐genome SNP data suggest that selecting long bones, hand and foot bones, and teeth subjected to temperatures <350°C are the most likely sources for higher genomic DNA yields. Furthermore, we observed an inverse correlation between the number of captured SNPs and the extent to which samples were burned, as well as a significant decrease in the total number of SNPs measured for samples subjected to temperatures >350°C. Our data complement previous analyses of burned human remains that compare extraction methods for downstream forensic applications and support the idea of adopting a modified Dabney extraction technique when traditional forensic methods fail to produce DNA yields sufficient for genetic identification.

Funder

National Institute of Justice

Publisher

Wiley

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