DNA transfer: The role of temperature and drying time
Legal Medicine, 2014
Authors
Journal
Legal Medicine
Study Design
Addressed Question
drying time and transfer rates of blood at different temperatures
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
1
Replicates per Individual and Condition
4
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
N/A
Criteria for Shedder Status
N/A
Previous Activities
N/A
Contact Scenario
application of blood to primary substrate - delay - transfer to secondary substrate - sampling (see Goray et al, 2010)
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
1 cm^2 plastic substrate
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
15 or 30 µl Li-Heparin blood
Delay
0, 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 45 min, 1, 4, 24 h, 1 wks. (hot (40°C, 40% humidity), room temperature (22°C, 60% humidity), cold (4°C, 60 % humidity))
Secondary Substrate
Secondary Substrate Type
cotton fabric
Secondary Substrate Material
Secondary Substrate Contact
pressure 60s
Further Transfer
N/A
Sampling
Background DNA on Sampled Surface
Sampling Time
direct
Persistence
N/A
Sampling Method
direct processing of substrates
Sampling Area
1 cm^2 area of primary substrate
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
DNA IQ (Promega), Biomek Nxp liquid handling workstation
DNA Quantification
Quantifiler (life technologies), AB 7500 (life technologies)
Input for Profiling
max. 10 µl or 1 ng of DNA in 25 µl
Profiling
half-volume AmpFlSTR Profiler Plus, 3100 Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper ID v3.2 (Life Technologies)
Reference Samples
from initial blood deposit
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
only for source confirmation
RNA Data Interpretation
N/A
Results
DNA Quantity
n.s. (only transfer rates in % calculated from conc. shown)
Profile Quality
n.a., DNA from expected source, no contamination;
Parameter Used for Comparison
% DNA transfer = DNA from secondary substrate (ng)/total DNA (primary + secondary substrate, ng)
Summary of Results
DNA transfer rates follow an exponential decay over time; transfer rates are fairly consistent between conditions within the first 5 and after 60 minutes and dependent on temperatures in between; high transfer from wet blood, very limited transfer when dry
Raised Questions
influences of other conditions (such as differences in humidity) and substrates on which the drying takes place; drying time of other biological fluids (semen, saliva); reason for lower transfer rates compared to Goray et al. (2010)?
Cautionary Remarks
biological substrate: blood + anticoagulant -> not realistic; significant interaction between volume and time or temperature, volume and time not tested, as volume only changed for one temperature, many more variables conceivable; differences in profile integrity n.a.