Whole-genome sequencing of a mid-20th-century femur from central Israel in an open missing-person case

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Whole-genome sequencing of a mid-20th-century femur from central Israel in an open missing-person case

Authors

Vol, E.; Waldman, S.; Lomes, A.; Brielle, E. S.; Appel, N.; Dolin, B.; Asif, S.; Nagar, Y.; Marco, E.; Bergman, N.; Khaner, O.; Raviv, D.; Oliel, J.; Lewis, R. Y.; Carmi, S.

Abstract

Genome-wide technologies can generate investigative leads in cold cases by determining the genetic ancestry of the forensic sample. Increasingly, DNA extraction and whole-genome sequencing or genotyping are being used to analyze early or middle-20th century skeletal remains. Here, we present the first case, to our knowledge, of whole-genome sequencing of a middle-20th-century bone sample from the Middle East. A femur discovered in a cave in Central Israel was proposed to belong to a person of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry who was missing since 1948. Following DNA extraction and single-stranded library preparation, whole-genome sequencing generated nearly 500 million reads. However, only 0.5% of the reads mapped to the human genome, providing depth of coverage of 0.07x. After quality control and male sex inference, ancestry assignment was performed using principal components and ADMIXTURE analyses. The results suggested that the genome definitively belonged to a person of Arab ancestry, refuting the hypothesis of an Ashkenazi Jewish origin.

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