Abstract

Sex determination is important in archeology and anthropology for the study of past societies, cultures, and human activities. Sex determination is also one of the most important components of individual identification in criminal investigations. We developed a new method of sex determination by detecting a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the amelogenin gene using amplified product-length polymorphisms in combination with sex-determining region Y analysis. We particularly focused on the most common types of postmortem DNA damage in ancient and forensic samples: fragmentation and nucleotide modification resulting from deamination. Amplicon size was designed to be less than 60 bp to make the method more useful for analyzing degraded DNA samples. All DNA samples collected from eight Japanese individuals (four male, four female) were evaluated correctly using our method. The detection limit for accurate sex determination was determined to be 20 pg of DNA. We compared our new method with commercial short tandem repeat analysis kits using DNA samples artificially fragmented by ultraviolet irradiation. Our novel method was the most robust for highly fragmented DNA samples. To deal with allelic dropout resulting from deamination, we adopted “bidirectional analysis,” which analyzed samples from both sense and antisense strands. This new method was applied to 14 Jomon individuals (3500-year-old bone samples) whose sex had been identified morphologically. We could correctly identify the sex of 11 out of 14 individuals. These results show that our method is reliable for the sex determination of highly degenerated samples.

Highlights

  • Sex determination of ancient humans is important in the study of ancient cultures, societies, archeological histories, and genealogies

  • This novel sense–antisense amelogenin genes (AMEL) PCR-APLP assay with sex-determining region Y (SRY) analysis incorporates “bidirectional analysis” to examine samples from both sense and antisense strands to enable the analysis of massively degraded DNA

  • Sex determination based on a novel PCR-APLP method

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sex determination of ancient humans is important in the study of ancient cultures, societies, archeological histories, and genealogies. The SRY gene, as an alternative Y-specific marker, is coamplified with the AMEL gene because largeregion deletions in the Y chromosome are frequently observed and responsible for AMELY allelic dropout, resulting in incorrect conclusions regarding the sex associated with the sample [34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50] This novel sense–antisense AMEL PCR-APLP assay with SRY analysis incorporates “bidirectional analysis” to examine samples from both sense and antisense strands to enable the analysis of massively degraded DNA

Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call