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DNA typing of epithelial cells after strangulation.

International Journal of Legal Medicine, 1997

Authors

Journal

International Journal of Legal Medicine


Study Design

Addressed Question

DNA transfer in a scenario of manual strangulation

Activity Context

Manual Strangulation

Category

Primary DepositRecovery

Specifications

Sampling

Variables of Interest

attacker victim combinationSampling Method

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

16 pairs

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNAY-Chromosome

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

12 males, 4 females

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

N/A

Contact Scenario

simulated manual strangulation - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

body part: upper arm

Primary Substrate Material

Skin

Deposit

simulated strangulation (1min contact with arm movements, friction)

Delay

N/A

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

direct

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

low pressure rubbing with glass fiber pieces or sterile cotton swabs moistened with aqua bidest

Sampling Area

victim's skin

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

Chelex, final volume: 200 µl

DNA Quantification

Slot blot technique

Input for Profiling

10-20 µl

Profiling

amplification of 3 STR loci: HumCD4, HumVWF31A, Hum-FIBRA, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis

Reference Samples

taken from all attackers and victim

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

comparison to reference profiles

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

0.5-2 ng

Profile Quality

>70% full profiles (all three loci)

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA yield; DNA typing success

Summary of Results

DNA yield in the same range for both sampling methods, but cotton swabs easier to handle; DNA typing success in >70% of cases; 70% of successfully typed profiles were mixtures from attacker and victim, mostly victim bands more intense; additional uninterpretable bands in few cases; Y-STR typing also possible

Raised Questions

Chance of obtaining victim DNA on the hands and under the fingernails from the attacker

Cautionary Remarks

no information about participants' previous activities and possibilities of previous contact