A 17-month time course study of human RNA and DNA degradation in body fluids under dry and humid environmental conditions.
International Journal of Legal Medicine, 2016
Authors
Journal
International Journal of Legal Medicine
Study Design
Addressed Question
RNA and DNA degradation in human body fluids over time
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
3
Replicates per Individual and Condition
3
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
N/A
Criteria for Shedder Status
N/A
Previous Activities
N/A
Contact Scenario
deposition of body fluid on paper - storage under dry/humid conditions for different time periods - sampling
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
filter paper
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
mock stains of 5, 0.5 and 0.05 µl body fluid
Delay
N/A
Secondary Substrate
Secondary Substrate Type
N/A
Secondary Substrate Material
N/A
Secondary Substrate Contact
N/A
Further Transfer
N/A
Sampling
Background DNA on Sampled Surface
Sampling Time
delayed
Persistence
time: 0-71 weeks, conditions: dry (20-25°C, day light exposure), humid (100% humidity)
Sampling Method
direct extraction from paper cards
Sampling Area
whole paper card containing stain
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
AllPrep DNA/RNA/miRNA co-extraction kit, automated silica-based purification method using EZ1 robot for RNA and M48 robot for DNA (all Qiagen)
DNA Quantification
Quantifiler human DNA quantification kit, ABI 7599 real-time PCR system
Input for Profiling
0.5 ng or 5 µl max. volume DNA template
Profiling
DNA: Investigator Decaplex SE kit, AB3130 genetic analyzer, GeneMapper software ID v3.2, threshold: 50 rfu RNA: cDNA synthesis (iScript cDNA synthesis kit), amplification in duplex mRNA assays with tissue specific primers (blood: HBB, SPTB; saliva: STATH, HTN3; semen: PRM1, PRM2) + post-PCR purification (Sephadex), AB3130 Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper Software IDv3.2
Reference Samples
taken from body fluid donors
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
comparison to reference profiles, counting of successfully amplified alleles
RNA Data Interpretation
RFU intervals converted into a relative scale of 5 rfu intensity categories for each body fluid type marker
Results
DNA Quantity
average yield dry samples: 6.5-8.47 ng blood, 18.7-20.47 ng saliva, 149.21-212.92 ng semen (high variability in humid samples due to mold)
Profile Quality
mostly complete profile from 5µl deposit under dry conditions (partial profile for lower deposits) and mostly partial to absent profiles under humid conditions
Parameter Used for Comparison
% successfully amplified alleles, relative rfu intensity of RNA markers
Summary of Results
mold significantly affects stains under humid conditions, especially blood and semen stains; generally higher stability under dry conditions; body fluid markers show varying stability, high stability for HBB and PRM1, low stability for saliva markers (susceptibility to hydrolytic damage); highest DNA yields from semen samples; STR typing was mostly successful under dry conditions over the whole time and only successful under humid conditions up to 33 weeks; completeness: semen > blood > saliva; the initial deposit also has a high influence on typing success; the degree of mold formations is strongly correlated to DNA amplification success; mRNA and DNA can be recovered in sufficient quality and quantity from both extraction methods used here
Raised Questions
increased RNA stability by targeting transcript stable regions (StaRs)?
Cautionary Remarks
DNA quantity over time n.s.; indications of degradation (e.g. high vs. Low molecular weight loci) n.s.