Tryps-IN: A streamlined palaeoproteomics workflow enables ZooMS analysis of 10,000-year-old petrous bones from Jordan rift-valley

  • Jensen Theis Zeitner (Creator)
  • Yeomans Lisa (Creator)
  • Louise Le Meillour (Creator)
  • Nielsen Wistoft Pia (Creator)
  • Ramsøe Max (Creator)
  • Meaghan Mackie (Creator)
  • Bangsgaard Pernille (University of Copenhagen) (Creator)
  • Kinzel Moritz (Creator)
  • Thuesen Ingolf (Creator)
  • Matthew James Collins (Creator)
  • Alberto J. Taurozzi (Creator)

    Dataset

    Description

    Poor preservation of collagen in dry and/or arid environments has hindered the application of Zooarchaeology by mass spectrometry (ZooMS) analysis in many regions of the world, and as a result many zooarchaeological investigations have relied exclusively on the morphological assessment of fragmentary remains, due to the inadequate preservation of biomolecules. The climatic conditions of Southwest Asia include extreme temperature fluctuations unconducive to preservation of proteins and DNA. We performed zooarchaeological analysis of remains from the 10,000-year-old site of Shkārat Msaied in Jordan and sub-sampled twenty-eight petrous bones, the hardest bone in the mammalian skeleton, for species identification by ZooMS. Using an unconventional and simplified extraction protocol we call Tryps-IN, in which digestion was performed without removal of the demineralising EDTA, we taxonomically identified several fragments, outperforming the established ZooMS work-flow. A subset of identifications was subsequently confirmed using liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) protein sequencing. The new methodology presented here opens the possibility of further bioarchaeological investigation of other fragmentary faunal assemblages within this region of archaeological significance.
    Date made available2023
    PublisherZenodo

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