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Amino acid racemization in amber-entombed insects:...
Journal article

Amino acid racemization in amber-entombed insects: Implications for DNA preservation

Abstract

DNA depurination and amino acid racemization take place at similar rates in aqueous solution at neutral pH. This relationship suggests that amino acid racemization may be useful in accessing the extent of DNA chain breakage in ancient biological remains. To test this suggestion, we have investigated the amino acids in insects entombed in fossilized tree resins ranging in age from <100 years to 130 million years. The amino acids present in 40 to 130 million year old amber-entombed insects resemble those in a modern fly and are probably the most ancient, unaltered amino acids found so far on Earth. In comparison to other geochemical environments on the surface of the Earth, the amino acid racemization rate in amber insect inclusions is retarded by a factor of >10(4). These results suggest that in amber insect inclusions DNA …

Authors

Bada JL; Wang XS; Poinar HN; Pääbo S; Poinar GO

Journal

Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Vol. 58, No. 14, pp. 3131–3135

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

July 1994

DOI

10.1016/0016-7037(94)90185-6

ISSN

0016-7037