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Isolation and Characterization of Live Yeast Cells from Ancient Vessels as a Tool in Bio-Archaeology

机译:从古代船只中分离和鉴定活酵母细胞作为生物考古学的工具

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So far, most of the study of ancient organisms has been based mainly on the analysis of ancient DNA. Here we show that it is possible to isolate and study microorganisms—yeast in this case—from ancient pottery vessels used for fermentation. We demonstrate that it is highly likely that these cells are descendants of the original yeast strains that participated in the fermentation process and were absorbed into the clay matrix of the pottery vessels. Moreover, we characterized the isolated yeast strains, their genomes, and the beer they produced. These results open new and exciting avenues in the study of domesticated microorganisms and contribute significantly to the fields of bio- and experimental archaeology that aim to reconstruct ancient artifacts and products. ABSTRACT Ancient fermented food has been studied based on recipes, residue analysis, and ancient-DNA techniques and reconstructed using modern domesticated yeast. Here, we present a novel approach based on our hypothesis that enriched yeast populations in fermented beverages could have become the dominant species in storage vessels and their descendants could be isolated and studied today. We developed a pipeline of yeast isolation from clay vessels and screened for yeast cells in beverage-related and non-beverage-related ancient vessels and sediments from several archaeological sites. We found that yeast cells could be successfully isolated specifically from clay containers of fermented beverages. The findings that genotypically the isolated yeasts are similar to those found in traditional African beverages and phenotypically they grow similar to modern beer-producing yeast strongly suggest that they are descendants of the original fermenting yeast. These results demonstrate that modern microorganisms can serve as a new tool in bio-archaeology research.
机译:迄今为止,大多数对古代生物的研究主要是基于对古代DNA的分析。在这里,我们表明可以从用于发酵的古老陶器中分离和研究微生物(在这种情况下为酵母)。我们证明,这些细胞很可能是参与发酵过程的原始酵母菌株的后代,并被吸收到陶器的粘土基质中。此外,我们对分离的酵母菌株,它们的基因组以及它们生产的啤酒进行了表征。这些结果为驯化微生物的研究开辟了令人兴奋的新途径,并为旨在重建古代人工制品和产品的生物和实验考古领域做出了重要贡献。摘要已基于配方,残留分析和古代DNA技术对古代发酵食品进行了研究,并使用现代驯化酵母对其进行了重建。在这里,我们基于我们的假设提出了一种新颖的方法,即,发酵饮料中丰富的酵母菌种群可能已经成为存储容器中的优势物种,并且其后代今天可以被分离和研究。我们开发了从黏土容器中分离出酵母的管道,并筛选了与饮料相关和与饮料无关的古代容器中的酵母细胞,并筛选了几个考古现场的沉积物。我们发现酵母细胞可以成功地从发酵饮料的黏土容器中成功分离出来。从基因型上讲,分离的酵母与在非洲传统饮料中发现的酵母相似,在表型上,它们的生长与现代啤酒生产的酵母相似,这一发现强烈地表明,它们是原始发酵酵母的后代。这些结果表明现代微生物可以作为生物考古学研究的新工具。

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