A Systematic Analysis of Secondary DNA Transfer
Journal of forensic sciences, 1999
Authors
Journal
Journal of forensic sciences
Study Design
Addressed Question
Possibility of secondary DNA transfer in controlled conditions and on regularly used items (approximate replication of conditions in Oorschot et al. (1997, Nature letter))
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
6
Replicates per Individual and Condition
N/A
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
N/A
Criteria for Shedder Status
N/A
Previous Activities
N/A
Contact Scenario
(1): handshake - holding object; (2): handling of coffee mug by first person - handling by second person (3) regular interaction with objects
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
(1): body part: hands (2): personal items: coffee mugs (3) commonly handled items, personal items (phones, door handles, briefcase, computer keyboard, coffee cups, steering wheels)
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
(1) handshake with friction (1, 5, 10, 30, 60s) (2) regular handling 2h (3) regular handling
Delay
N/A
Secondary Substrate
Secondary Substrate Type
(1) points of entry: door handle (2) body part: hand
Secondary Substrate Material
Secondary Substrate Contact
(1) friction grip 5s (2) handling 10s
Further Transfer
N/A
Sampling
Background DNA on Sampled Surface
Sampling Time
(1)+(2): direct, (3): direct/delayed
Persistence
N/A
Sampling Method
Swabs moistened with sterile water
Sampling Area
participants palms or object surfaces
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
organic extraction/microcon-100 purification
DNA Quantification
QuantiBlot kit (Perkin Elmer)
Input for Profiling
5 ng of DNA or up to 20 µL / 1 ng or up to 10 µl
Profiling
AmpliType PM + DQA1 typing kit (Perkin Elmer Applied Biosystems); AmpFlSTR Profiler Plus and Cofiler DNA typing kits, ABI Prism 377 DNA Sequencer (Perkin Elmer Applied Biosystems) Threshold: 75 rfu
Reference Samples
N/A
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
comparison to reference profile
RNA Data Interpretation
N/A
Results
DNA Quantity
1-15 ng
Profile Quality
profile quality highly dependent on individual, in most cases too degraded for interpretation, secondary transfer occasionally with minor peaks
Parameter Used for Comparison
DNA yield, profile detectability
Summary of Results
Primary transfer detected but highly dependent on individual; profiles from primary transfer (precleaned and regularly used items) not always possible due to high amount of degradation; detection of secondary transfer was rare and profiles never complete; Conclusion: data does not support that interpretation of DNA profiles from case samples could be compromised by secondary transfer
Raised Questions
N/A
Cautionary Remarks
presentation of profiling results in rather broad categories