A multidisciplinary study of archaeological grape seeds.
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Authors
Cappellini, Enrico
Gilbert, M Thomas P
Geuna, Filippo
Fiorentino, Girolamo
Hall, Allan
Thomas-Oates, Jane
Ashton, Peter D
Ashford, David A
Arthur, Paul
Campos, Paula F
Kool, Johan
Collins, Matthew J
Publication Date
2010-02Journal Title
Naturwissenschaften
ISSN
0028-1042
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
97
Issue
2
Pages
205-217
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Cappellini, E., Gilbert, M. T. P., Geuna, F., Fiorentino, G., Hall, A., Thomas-Oates, J., Ashton, P. D., et al. (2010). A multidisciplinary study of archaeological grape seeds.. Naturwissenschaften, 97 (2), 205-217. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-009-0629-3
Abstract
We report here the first integrated investigation of both ancient DNA and proteins in archaeobotanical samples: medieval grape (Vitis vinifera L.) seeds, preserved by anoxic waterlogging, from an early medieval (seventh-eighth century A.D.) Byzantine rural settlement in the Salento area (Lecce, Italy) and a late (fourteenth-fifteenth century A.D.) medieval site in York (England). Pyrolysis gas chromatography mass spectrometry documented good carbohydrate preservation, whilst amino acid analysis revealed approximately 90% loss of the original protein content. In the York sample, mass spectrometry-based sequencing identified several degraded ancient peptides. Nuclear microsatellite locus (VVS2, VVMD5, VVMD7, ZAG62 and ZAG79) analysis permitted a tentative comparison of the genetic profiles of both the ancient samples with the modern varieties. The ability to recover microsatellite DNA has potential to improve biomolecular analysis on ancient grape seeds from archaeological contexts. Although the investigation of five microsatellite loci cannot assign the ancient samples to any geographic region or modern cultivar, the results allow speculation that the material from York was not grown locally, whilst the remains from Supersano could represent a trace of contacts with the eastern Mediterranean.
Keywords
Agriculture, Archaeology, Climate, DNA, Plant, History, Medieval, Mediterranean Region, Plant Proteins, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Seeds, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Vitis, Water Supply, Wine
Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/E009964/1)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-009-0629-3
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/286395
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Licence URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
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