dnatrack is a work in progress — updates ship daily. Report a bug or request a feature →

Casework-related DNA transfer on footwear in consideration of the shedder status

Forensic science international. Genetics, 2022

Study Design

Addressed Question

The study investigates the role of shedder status (e.g., "good," "intermediate," or "bad" shedders) in DNA deposition and recovery, particularly in scenarios involving owners and subsequent users of shoes. Controlled experiments were designed to assess how different shedder status combinations (e.g., owner vs. second user) affect DNA profiles. The study examines DNA quantities and typing success across sampling locations (e.g., inner heel/tongue, shoelaces, outer sole) It also evaluates DNA prevalence on shoe soles worn indoors versus outdoors. The research explores the challenges of distinguishing between DNA from the owner and subsequent users, particularly in forensic scenarios where activity-level interpretations (e.g., direct vs. indirect transfer) are critical. The study considers indirect transfer dynamics, such as DNA deposited via environmental contact or handling, and how shedder status affects the likelihood of secondary transfer

Activity Context

Casework

Category

Background DNAPersistencePrimary DepositRecoveryTransfer Scenario

Specifications

BG on Personal ItemsContactExtractionIndividual CharacteristicsPersistence with Environmental ConditionsPrevious ActivitiesSamplingSurfaceTransfer Sequence

Variables of Interest

Shedder Statustype of surface (shoe)duration of wearsampling location

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

5

Replicates per Individual and Condition

Each 2 shoes/individual (n=10): Prevalence of DNA on Shoe Soles: 2 (front/rear); Prevalence of DNA on Upper Parts: 4 (heel, insole, tongue, laces); Casework-Related Scenario: 5 sampling areas; Standardized Scenario: 2 (original/complement shoe)

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

N/A

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

good, intermediate, and bad shedders based on prior shedder tests

Criteria for Shedder Status

As determined by Fonnelop et al. (2017): 15 participants (5 male, 10 female) performed the same test (uncontrolled handwashing conditions, firmly grabbing 15mL plastic tubes for 10s in the dominant hand) in triplicates (at least 6h inbetween samplings). Classification as good shedders (=2 or 3 out of 3 DNA quantities above group mean DNA yield and min. 12 complete loci out of 16 loci tested in min. 2 out of 3 profiles) or poor shedders (=more than 4 incomplete loci in min. 2 profiles or 2 or 3 below mean DNA yields)

Previous Activities

Shoes had been owned for ≥3 months or worn ≥30 times; Indoor samples: Shoes were worn in office/workplace environments for ≥4 hours on dry, non-porous floors;Outdoor samples: Shoes were worn for ≥500 steps on dry surfaces

Contact Scenario

wearing shoes, walking

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

different areas of shoes

Primary Substrate Material

FabricLeatherRubber

Deposit

wearing shoes

Delay

sampling within hours after deposition

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

Present

Sampling Time

sampling within hours after deposition

Persistence

n.s.

Sampling Method

Soles and insoles: Premoistened PurFlock swabs, Heel/Tongue/Laces: Adhesive filmolux® S23 film

Sampling Area

Soles: Front/rear outer areas, 3 cm-wide strip (left-right edge) Heel/Tongue: Inner/outer surfaces, Halved area; Laces: Full length (5 × 10 cm); Insole: Entire surface

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

Investigator Casework GO! Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany): 60 μl casework buffer (58 μl casework solution + 2 μl Proteinase K)

DNA Quantification

Investigator Quantiplex Pro Kit (Qiagen) on a QS5 RealTime PCR system: 4.5 μl of reaction mix and primer mix were combined with 2 μl of sample for quantification

Input for Profiling

N/A

Profiling

ESSplexSE QS kit (Qiagen), ABI 3500 Genetic Analyzer (Thermo Fisher Scientific) with POP-4 polymer and a 36 cm array, GeneMapper™ ID-X Software V1.5, AT 50 RFU, Locus-specific stutter filters, EuroForMix V3.3.1, Statistefix 4.0

Reference Samples

available for all participants, lab staff and housemates

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

GeneMapper™ ID-X Software V1.5, AT 50 RFU, Locus-specific stutter filters, EuroForMix V3.3.1, Statistefix 4.0: total no. Of alleles, Mixture Proportions and quantities

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

Soles (Indoor): 522–8694 pg DNA (range), 3434 ± 1114 pg (mean); Soles (Outdoor): 182 ± 120 pg DNA (mean); Upper Parts (Insole): 4189 ± 2716 pg DNA (mean); Upper Parts (Laces): 6637 ± 3667 pg DNA (mean)

Profile Quality

Indoor Soles: High allele counts (28 ± 2 owner alleles), complex mixtures, owner as major contributor; Outdoor Soles: Degraded profiles (8 ± 3 owner alleles), insufficient for probabilistic assessment; Upper Parts (Laces/Heel): High DNA yield, multi-contributor mixtures, no single-source profiles; Subsequent Users: Detectable alleles post-use, potential for major contribution shifts

Parameter Used for Comparison

total no. Of alleles, Mixture Proportions and quantities

Summary of Results

DNA profile quality on footwear depends on sampling location (indoor/outdoor, upper parts) and shedder status. Indoor and upper-part samples are more forensically informative, while outdoor samples often lack utility. Shedder status affects contribution levels, but intermediate shedders introduce variability. Subsequent users’ DNA is detectable rapidly, complicating activity-level interpretations

Raised Questions

N/A

Cautionary Remarks

N/A