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Comprehensive examination of conventional and innovative body fluid identification approaches and DNA profiling of laundered blood- and saliva-stained pieces of cloths

International Journal of Legal Medicine, 2018

Authors

Journal

International Journal of Legal Medicine


Study Design

Addressed Question

possibility of STR profiling and body fluid identification from laundered blood and saliva stains

Activity Context

AssaultWashing Machine

Category

PersistenceRecovery

Specifications

Persistence with TemperaturePersistence with TimePersistence with Water ImmersionRNA ProfilingSurface

Variables of Interest

clothing fiber typebiological fluidvolume of initial depositwashing temperaturenumber of washingswashing machinelaundry detergentstorage time

Stringency of Control

Close to Realistic

Number of Individuals

N/A

Replicates per Individual and Condition

2-4

Nucleic Acid

DNARNA

Bodily Origin

bloodsaliva

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

healthy donors

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

30 min no eating or drinking prior to saliva donation

Contact Scenario

deposit of body fluid on clothing - washing scenario (1x or 2x) - (storage) - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

cotton and synthetic fabric cloths (13x18 cm)

Primary Substrate Material

CottonFabric

Deposit

20 or 100 µl deposit of blood or saliva

Delay

drying overnight

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

Negative (Assumed)

Sampling Time

delayed

Persistence

storage: 30 days at room temperate (one set); washing procedure: standardized washing program in LG Intellowasher WD-16110FD washing machine at 40°C (once) or 60°C (once or twice) or Miele washing machine ED 111-" 5873 (60°C, once), laundry detergent: liquid detergent without phosphatases from DM, detergent powder from Persil (machine 1), detergent powder from Persil (machine 2)

Sampling Method

direct extraction from clothing

Sampling Area

half of the stained area (one half used for DNA extraction and the other half used for RNA extraction)

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

DNA: Maxwell 16 RSC Blood DNA kit, final volume: 60 µl; RNA: Maxwell 16 RSC miRNA Tissue kit, final volume: 50 µl

DNA Quantification

DNA: PowerQuant system; RNA: QuantiFluor RNA system

Input for Profiling

DNA: up to 450 pg or 10 µl of extract; mRNA: 12 µl extract for RT, 4 µl of RT product for profiling

Profiling

DNA: Investigator ESSplex SE QS (29 cycles), ABI Prism 3130 Genetic analyzer, GeneMapper ID v3.2 (threshold: 50/150 rfu); mRNA: endpoint PCR according to Lindenbergh et al. (2012) using the markers HBB, ALAS2, CD93, HTN3, STATH and ACTB, 18SrRNA, ABI Prism 3130 Genetic analyzer, GeneMapper ID v3.2 (threshold: 50 rfu)

Reference Samples

taken from donors

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

grading of profiles according to German database guidelines (reportable when >5/8 loci can be designated, informative but not reportable with fewer loci, not informative when too few alleles are detected)

RNA Data Interpretation

observation of body-fluid specific peaks

Results

DNA Quantity

0-4.8 ng for saliva, 0-165 ng for blood

Profile Quality

mostly reportable (91.1%) profiles from blood, mostly reportable (52.1%) or informative (33.3%) profiles from saliva

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA yield (pg/µl), DNA profile quality (grading according to German database guidelines), mRNA profiling success per marker, presumptive testing success rates

Summary of Results

DNA results (blood): DNA quantification results decreased after washing with a higher decrease for higher washing temperatures and more washings, cotton fabric shows a stronger retention of biological material than synthetic fabric, a 30d storage period prior to washing did not seem to have an effect on DNA yield, the newer washing machine as well as the non-liquid detergent (washer 2) resulted in lower DNA yields, most STR profiles (91.1%) were in the reportable category, transfer controls showed 2/7 reportable, 2/7 informative and 3/7 not informative profiles; DNA results (saliva): saliva stains generally yielded lower DNA amounts than blood stains, DNA quantification results decreased after washing with a higher decrease for higher washing temperatures and more washing steps, synthetic fabric shows a stronger retention of biological material than cotton fabric for saliva, a 30d storage period prior to washing lead to an increase in DNA yield, STR profiles were mostly reportable (52.1%) or informative (33.3%), profiles in the "not informative" category were only obtained from 20 µl deposits and were more likely washed by washer 2, transfer controls did not results in reportable or informative profiles but showed drop-in of up to 13 alleles; Presumptive tests (blood): stains on cotton cloths visible (even after 60°C washes), immunochromatographic detection (FOB or RSID-blood test) negative for all washed stains, Haemastix results positive for all washed stains (except for samples washed by washer 2), Haemastix results also positive for 5/7 transfer controls, LumiScene Ultra reaction was still visible after washing with decreasing intensity with higher washing temperature, LumiScene Ultra Reaction on 40°C washed clothes was observed over the entire cloth not only on spotted areas; RNA (blood): after washing, detection of blood-specific peaks (mostly HBB) was possible in 4/56 (9%) samples (mostly 40°C washing, cotton cloth, 100µl initial deposit), transfer controls did not result in interpretable RNA profiles (thus transfer not measurable at RNA level); presumptive tests (saliva): visualization of saliva using an ALS was impossible after washing even at 40°C, the Phadebas Amylase test was positive after washing at 40°C but not after 60°C washings, RSID-saliva test was sporadically positive for some samples stored for 30days prior to washing at 60°C; RNA (saliva): RNA profiling was not successful in any sample

Raised Questions

analysis of miRNA for challenging and degraded samples; more experiments to determine whether powder detergents are more efficient in removing biological fluids than liquid detergents

Cautionary Remarks

high inter-individual variability observed for saliva deposits but donors for specific saliva samples n.s.