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Everything clean? Transfer of DNA traces between textiles in the washtub.

International Journal of Legal Medicine, 2015

Study Design

Addressed Question

possibility and amount of DNA transfer in the process of washing

Activity Context

Washing Machine

Category

PersistenceTransfer Scenario

Specifications

Bodily OriginPersistence with Water Immersion

Variables of Interest

DNA Sourcewashing process

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

15

Replicates per Individual and Condition

2

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

bloodsalivaskin (neck)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

10 woman age 39-58 years, 5 men age 38-58 years, no known skin disease

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

N/A

Contact Scenario

deposition of DNA on primary substrate - washing scenario - wringing and drying - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

cotton fabric cloths

Primary Substrate Material

Cotton

Deposit

rubbing 5s over neck skin, 1.5 mL venous blood (dried for 48 h), rubbing on buccal mucosa

Delay

N/A

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

clean cotton fabric cloth

Secondary Substrate Material

Cotton

Secondary Substrate Contact

handwashing (500 mL water +/- standardized detergent, 39.5-42.5 °C), washing machine (150 mL water + detergent, 40.0°C)

Further Transfer

N/A

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Negative (Confirmed)

Sampling Time

direct

Persistence

water immersion: handwashing (500 mL water +/- standardized detergent, 39.5-42.5 °C), washing machine (150 mL water + detergent, 40.0°C)

Sampling Method

taping of dried cloths and double swabbing (wetting agent: lysis buffer) of tapes

Sampling Area

10x4 cm cotton cloths

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

modified phenol chloroform extraction, final volume: 40 µl

DNA Quantification

Quantifiler Human DNA quantification kit (Applied Biosystems)

Input for Profiling

a.p.m.i.: 0.5 ng in 12.5 µl reaction volume

Profiling

Powerplex ESX 17 or Powerplex S5, ABI3130 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystem), GeneMapper ID software v3.2, threshold: 50 rfu

Reference Samples

buccal swaps from all participants

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

determination of donor profiles completeness: complete (every alleles in every locus present), partial (every alleles in ten or more loci present), no profiles (alleles in less than ten loci), regardless of additional allele peaks

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

blood cloths: 10-65 ng, buccal swab cloths: 0-12 ng, neck rubs: 0,67-52 ng, neck rub acceptor textiles: 0,21-2 ng

Profile Quality

complete profile (every allele in every STR) mostly obtained with blood stains, partial profile (every allele in 10 or more STRs): sometimes remaining on donor neck rub swab after hand washing , no profile (alleles in less than 10 STRs) from buccal swabs and most neck rubs

Parameter Used for Comparison

completeness of donor profiles based on number of full STR loci transferred

Summary of Results

transfer of cells or DNA between textiles in the washing process possible in principle; DNA profiles from blood stains can regularly be obtained from donor and cowashed textiles after each washing process with no difference between hand and machine washing; buccal cells were not transferred in a sufficient amount for STR typing; epithelial trace DNA is not transferred in an amount significant for STR profiling; epithelial trace DNA does mostly not persist on the donor textile in the process of washing with a few residual alleles detected after handwashing and no partial profiles after machine washing;

Raised Questions

influence by the composition of the detergent?

Cautionary Remarks

washing machine process not absolutely realistic (no exchange of water); DNA amounts not represented in detail (only ranges given and for buccal swabs and blood not clear whether those correspond to donor or acceptor textiles); results from buccal swabs incomplete (data n.s., persistence on donor textiles n.a.)