Following the transfer of DNA: How does the presence of background DNA affect the transfer and detection of a target source of DNA?
FSI Genetics, 2015
Authors
Journal
FSI Genetics
Study Design
Addressed Question
influence of background DNA and transfer steps on interpretability of profiles
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
5
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
deposit of biological material on all substrates (different donors) - (drying min 15 h) - 5 subsequent contact steps - sampling
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
hard non-porous glass, soft porous cotton fabric
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
15 µl blood, rubbing 30s
Delay
N/A
Secondary Substrate
Secondary Substrate Type
up to 6: glass, cotton (same as primary)
Secondary Substrate Material
Secondary Substrate Contact
pressure contact 15s + 1.4 kg weight
Further Transfer
up to 6: same as secondary transfer
Sampling
Background DNA on Sampled Surface
Sampling Time
direct
Persistence
N/A
Sampling Method
swabbing of glass, direct extraction from cotton (all substrates)
Sampling Area
4x4cm^2 squares of cotton and 5x7.5cm^2 glass slides
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
DNA IQ System Kit (Promega)
DNA Quantification
Quantifiler Human DNA Quantification Kit (Life Technologies), ABI PRISM 7500 SDS (Life Technologies
Input for Profiling
0.5 ng in 15 µl template (correction factor applied for samples >0.033 ng/µl)
Profiling
PowerPlex 21 Kit (Promega), ABI PRISM 3500xL Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper ID-X, threshold: 175 rfu
Reference Samples
taken from all donors
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
correction of peak heights based on input concentration, mixture deconvolution based on unique alleles from known contributors
RNA Data Interpretation
N/A
Results
DNA Quantity
100-950 ng from blood, 0.05-20 ng from touch
Profile Quality
Full unique target profiles after up to six transfers possible mostly on touch DNA background and up to 4 on blood background on cotton, mostly partial profiles on glass
Parameter Used for Comparison
completeness of target profile, total DNA proportion based on adjusted average unique allelic peak heights
Summary of Results
target profiles transferred further on glass than on cotton; proportion of target profiles reduced in each step (exception: flasking of dried blood); target DNA was detected as a major component only when touch DNA was background and blood was target; reverse transfer of profiles detected; forward and reverse transfer higher on glass than on cotton substrates; no significant differences between forward and reverse transfer rates; detectability of target DNA reduced in each step due to an increasing number of contributors and increased complexity of profiles
Raised Questions
N/A
Cautionary Remarks
amplification was performed once, repeated amplification could reduce the impact on stochastic unequal amplification of contributors; mixture interpretation according to casework approach not performed; peak heights only semi-quantitative, especially for low template samples and mixtures