Department of Archaeology, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (MPI-SHH), Kahlaische Straße 10, 07745 Jena, Germany.
School of Archaeology, University of Oxford, 1 South Parks Road, Oxford, UK.
J Proteomics. 2021 Feb 20;233:104078. doi: 10.1016/j.jprot.2020.104078. Epub 2020 Dec 15.
Collagen peptide mass fingerprinting, best known as Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry (or ZooMS) when applied to archaeology, has become invaluable for the taxonomic identification of archaeological collagenous materials, in particular fragmentary and modified bone remains. Prior to MALDI-based spectrometric analysis, collagen needs to be extracted from the bone's inorganic matrix, isolated and purified. Several protocols are currently employed for ZooMS analysis, however their efficacy and comparability has not been directly tested. Here, we use four different ZooMS protocols to analyze 400 bone samples from seven archaeological sites, dating to between ~500,000-2000 years ago. One of them, single-pot solid-phase-enhance sample preparation (SP3), is used for the first time as a ZooMS protocol. Our results indicate that the least-destructive ZooMS protocol which uses an ammonium bicarbonate buffer as a means of extracting collagen is most suitable for bones with good collagen preservation, whereas the acid-based methodologies can improve success rates for bones with low-to-medium collagen preservation. Since preservation of biomolecules in archaeological bones is highly variable due to age and environmental conditions, we use the percent nitrogen by weight (%N) value as an independent semi-quantitative proxy for assessing collagen content and for predicting which bones will likely result in a successful ZooMS-based identification. We find that 0.26%N as a threshold for screening material could optimize the number of spectra which produce identifications using ZooMS. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: We present a direct comparison of three previously published ZooMS protocols for the analyses of archaeological bones, and the first use of an SP3-based approach to ZooMS analysis. Our results show that the acid-based ZooMS protocols increase the success rate for bones with low-medium collagen preservation. We identify 0.26%N as a threshold for optimizing the number of samples with enough collagen for successful peptide mass fingerprinting.
胶原蛋白肽质量指纹图谱,在应用于考古学时通常被称为质谱考古学(或 ZooMS),对于考古学中胶原蛋白的分类鉴定,特别是对碎片化和改性的骨骼遗骸,已经变得非常有价值。在基于 MALDI 的光谱分析之前,需要从骨骼的无机基质中提取胶原蛋白,然后对其进行分离和纯化。目前有几种用于 ZooMS 分析的方案,但它们的效果和可比性尚未直接测试。在这里,我们使用四种不同的 ZooMS 方案来分析来自七个考古遗址的 400 个骨骼样本,这些样本的年代在 50 万至 2000 年前之间。其中一种方案,即单管固相增强样品制备(SP3),首次被用作 ZooMS 方案。我们的研究结果表明,最适合具有良好胶原蛋白保存的骨骼的最具破坏性的 ZooMS 方案是使用碳酸氢铵缓冲液提取胶原蛋白的方案,而基于酸的方法可以提高具有低至中等胶原蛋白保存的骨骼的成功率。由于年龄和环境条件的原因,考古骨骼中生物分子的保存情况高度可变,因此我们使用重量百分比氮(%N)值作为评估胶原蛋白含量和预测哪些骨骼可能成功进行基于 ZooMS 的鉴定的独立半定量替代物。我们发现,0.26%N 作为筛选材料的阈值可以优化使用 ZooMS 产生鉴定的光谱数量。
我们直接比较了三种先前发表的用于分析考古骨骼的 ZooMS 方案,并首次将基于 SP3 的方法应用于 ZooMS 分析。我们的结果表明,基于酸的 ZooMS 方案提高了具有低至中等胶原蛋白保存的骨骼的成功率。我们确定 0.26%N 作为优化具有足够胶原蛋白用于成功肽质量指纹图谱的样本数量的阈值。