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Detection of offender DNA following skin-to-skin contact with a victim

FSI Genetics, 2018

Study Design

Addressed Question

Transfer and persistence of an offender's DNA to a victim's skin and further transfer to victim's clothing

Activity Context

Assault

Category

PersistencePrimary DepositTransfer Scenario

Specifications

BG on Skin / Other Body LocationsContactIndividual CharacteristicsPersistence with Regular ActivitiesPersistence with TimeTransfer via Vector

Variables of Interest

individualsSampling Areaassault scenariotime period between assault and sampling

Stringency of Control

Close to Realistic

Number of Individuals

22 (18 per time point)

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)skin (upper arm)skin (wrist)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

15 males, 7 females

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

no instructions, no previous contact to assault scenario partner

Contact Scenario

assault scenario - (delay) - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

body part: skin (study partner's wrist or upper arm)

Primary Substrate Material

Skin

Deposit

2-3s Medium pressure or 15s heavy pressure and friction

Delay

N/A

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

fabric clothing

Secondary Substrate Material

Fabric

Secondary Substrate Contact

wearing over the assault area

Further Transfer

N/A

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Present

Sampling Time

direct, delayed

Persistence

regular activities for 0, 3, 24 h (recorded)

Sampling Method

Cotton Fab swabs (Puritan), double swabbing technique (multiple times with medium pressure while the swabs is kept at an angle and rotated

Sampling Area

target skin area (approx. 10 cm), control skin area (approx. 10 cm), contacting clothing area

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

QIAamp DNA investigator kit (manually), elution: 2x25 µl

DNA Quantification

Quantifiler HP for 0 and 3 h samples, Quantifiler Trio for 24 h samples

Input for Profiling

1 ng or max. 15 µl

Profiling

GlobalFiler PCR Amplification kit, 3500 Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper ID-X v1.4, threshold: 45 rfu

Reference Samples

buccal swabs obtained from all participants

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

only samples >10 alleles considered, counting unique alleles for each known contributor and number of non-participant alleles, STRmix v2.4.05 and v2.4.06 with exclusion of laboratory personal via staff elimination database, intuitiveness of STRmix output compared to epg

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

Background DNA: 0-102 ng, n.s. for other skin samples, avg. 3 ng for clothing samples

Profile Quality

mostly complete profiles from victims, largely variable contribution from offenders

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA quantity, frequency of non-self-alleles, % unique offender alleles detected; LR

Summary of Results

background DNA on wrist and upper arm ranged from 0-102 ng; freq(>10 non self-alleles): 10-45 %; non-self alleles mostly trace levels compared to self alleles; Large variation between self and non-self alleles between individuals and between samples from one individual (days and sampling locations); recurring non-self contributors could be identified as intimate partners in 2 cases; unexpected: significant difference in the number of self and non-self alleles between control swabs before experiments (0, 3 and 24 h); significant post-assault increase in DNA quantity not dependent on sampling location and whether friction was involved; % of unique offender alleles detected and LR supporting Hp increased with friction; 3 participants did not transfer enough DNA for a LR in their support with either grip strength indicating the possibility of a shedder status being involved; background DNA from the offender was observed to be transferred to the victim in one case; Persistence: % Mixture proportions of offenders were significantly reduced from 0 to 3 and 24 h after assault and comparable to non-participant proportions; significantly more DNA obtained from clothing swabs compared to skin swabs (avg. 3 ng); Mostly victim DNA found in clothing swabs with offender and non-participant contribution <5%; in some cases after 24 h clothing did give an extremely strong support for Hp when skin samples did not anymore; clothing samples mostly gave more complex mixtures than skin samples; semi-raw data available in supplementary tables for re-analysis

Raised Questions

Further studies to increase our understanding of the impact of different activities on the level of background DNA on our skin; further work to characterize the usefulness of sampling clothing in contact with an assaulted area

Cautionary Remarks

significant difference in background DNA between experiment setups (0, 3 and 24 h) not expected but not further evaluated; details on clothing (type, when and how long worn) not always available