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A molecular exploration of human DNA/RNA co-extracted from the palmar surface of the hands and fingers.

FSI Genetics, 2016

Study Design

Addressed Question

quality, quantity and origin of background DNA on hands

Activity Context

None

Category

Background DNARecovery

Specifications

Bodily OriginIndividual CharacteristicsPrevious ActivitiesRNA ProfilingSampling

Variables of Interest

previous activitiessexSampling Method

Stringency of Control

Reality

Number of Individuals

60

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNARNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

30 males, 30 females, varying age, sex, hygiene and personal habits

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

normal activities

Contact Scenario

direct sampling of the whole hand surface (L+R)

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

body part: hands

Primary Substrate Material

Skin

Deposit

natural presence

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

Sampled

Sampling Time

direct/delayed

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

dry cotton swabbing, wet cotton swabbing (water), tape-lifting

Sampling Area

palmar surface of hands and fingers

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

DNA/RNA coextraction using AllPrep DNA/RNA Micro Kit

DNA Quantification

Plexor HY System (Promega), CFX96 Real-Time PCR

Input for Profiling

0.5 ng or 15 µl template

Profiling

DNA: ESSplex SE Plus kit (Qiagen), 30 cycle standard protocol, ABI Prism 310 Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper software, Threshold: 50rfu; RNA: multiplex end point PCR of 16 different tissue markers (blood, mucosa, saliva, semen, vaginal mucosa, menstrual secretions, skin) and three housekeeping genes (Lindenbergh et al., 2012), ABI Prism 310 genetic Analyzer

Reference Samples

buccal swabs taken from all depositors

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

comparison to reference sample; determination of foreign alleles and relative contribution based on foreign peak heights/total peak height

RNA Data Interpretation

body fluid classification in three broad categories based on informative profiles (highest expressed housekeeping genes, no saturated peaks): skin, other than skin, indeterminate

Results

DNA Quantity

0-585 ng, median: 1.6 ng

Profile Quality

high integrity profiles (>90%) in more than half of the samples, single source and up to four-person mixtures, mostly low level contribution from others (more than 20% in only 19.2%)

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA yield, DNA integrity (=percentage of expected alleles observed), foreign alleles observed (= percentage total peak height of unexpected alleles to total peak height of all alleles), tissue classification

Summary of Results

skin present in almost all samples, skin only in 55%; tissues other than skin mostly blood and saliva; wet swabbing technique generates higher amounts of indeterminate category; males show a higher variety of tissue types (even vaginal mucosa) on their hands; wide variety of DNA yields, significant trends: males>females, other than skin > skin samples, wet swabbing > other sampling techniques; DNA integrity: high yield>low yield, males>females, other than skin>skin samples; mixture: higher prevalence in female samples; inverse correlation between percentage foreign DNA and DNA integrity; previous actions showing an effect: touching and playing with hair -> DNA yield, using public transport, living with parents -> higher percentage foreign distribution

Raised Questions

Does the presence of material other than skin explain the occasional recovery of quality STR profiles from handled items? Further research to investigate preferable sampling technique for DNA/RNA co-analysis + sampling (moistening agent); Origin of foreign alleles (e.g. housemates, partners,...)?

Cautionary Remarks

underrepresentation of foreign peaks as only unexpected alleles were counted as foreign and peak height imbalances were not considered as foreign contribution;