Reduction of the contaminant fraction of DNA obtained from an ancient giant panda bone.
Nikolas BaslerGeorgios XenikoudakisMichael V WestburyLingfeng SongGuilian ShengAxel BarlowPublished in: BMC research notes (2017)
Bleach and pre-digestion treatments increased the endogenous DNA content up to ninefold. However, the absolute amount of DNA retrieved was dramatically reduced by all treatments. We also observed reduced DNA damage patterns in pre-treated libraries compared to untreated ones, resulting in longer mean fragment lengths and reduced thymine over-representation at fragment ends. Guanine-cytosine (GC) contents of both mapped and total reads are consistent between treatments and conform to general expectations, indicating no obvious biasing effect of the applied methods. Our results therefore confirm the value of bleach and pre-digestion as tools in palaeogenomic studies, providing sufficient material is available.