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Illuminating touch deposits through cellular characterization of hand rinses and body fluids with nucleic acid fluorescence

Forensic science international. Genetics, 2020

Authors

Journal

Forensic science international. Genetics


Study Design

Addressed Question

characterizing touch deposits through the cellular composition of hand rinses and body fluids using nucleic acid fluorescence to investigate the various sources of touch DNA, such as shed skin cells, cell-free DNA, and nucleated cells from saliva, nasal lavage, and eye wash. Investigation of variation within an individual on different days or between individuals

Activity Context

None

Category

Primary Deposit

Specifications

Bodily OriginIndividual CharacteristicsVisualisation

Variables of Interest

condition of hands (washed vs unwashed)origin of touch depositscellular DNAbody fluid

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

6

Replicates per Individual and Condition

3

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

corneocytes for control (cell culture)eyenasal mucosasalivaskin (hands)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

N/A

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

hand rinses: unwashed hands and washed hands (1-2 min and air-drying); saliva: no food/drink consumption for at least 1 hour

Contact Scenario

body fluid collection by rinses, no specific contact

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

none

Primary Substrate Material

N/A

Deposit

hand rinses: rubbing hands together while applying 6ml PBS; saliva: rinse mouth with water, no spitting; nasal cavity and eye washes: 6 ml PBS

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

Negative (Assumed)

Sampling Time

N/A

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

1. Hand Rinses: Unwashed hands: Volunteers rubbed their hands lightly together while 6 ml of PBS was applied in 2 ml increments. The rinse was collected in a sterile weighing boat and transferred to microcentrifuge tubes; Washed hands: After washing with soap, rinsing with tap water, and air-drying, the same PBS rinse procedure was repeated. 2. Body Fluid Collection: Saliva: Donors allowed saliva to accumulate in their mouths (without scraping buccal cells) and deposited 3 ml into sterile weighing boats, diluted with 3 ml PBS to reduce viscosity; Nasal lavage: 6 ml of PBS was flushed into the nasal cavity using sterile disposable pipettes, and runoff was collected in weighing boats; Eye wash: Sterilized eye rinse cups were used to flush 6 ml of PBS over the eye, with runoff collected into tubes.

Sampling Area

entire palms (both hands), nasal cavity( both nostrils), right eye

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

not performed (only flow cyometry and microscopy with direct cell counting by staining with diamond dye applied)

DNA Quantification

not performed (only flow cyometry and microscopy with direct cell counting by staining with diamond dye applied)

Input for Profiling

not performed (only flow cyometry and microscopy with direct cell counting by staining with diamond dye applied)

Profiling

not performed (only flow cyometry and microscopy with direct cell counting by staining with diamond dye applied)

Reference Samples

N/A

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

N/A

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

N/A

Profile Quality

N/A

Parameter Used for Comparison

Flow Cytometry Parameters: Size and Granularity: Forward Scatter (FSC): Measured cell/particulate size. Side Scatter (SSC): Measured granularity/internal complexity. Size Categories: Particulates were divided into four size ranges: <6 μm (subcellular fragments/debris), 6–10 μm (subcellular fragments, free nuclei), 10–15 μm (small cells like leukocytes), >15 μm (intact epithelial cells/corneocytes). Fluorescence Thresholds: Autofluorescence: Measured in unstained controls to set thresholds for DNA-positive events. DNA Staining: Events above autofluorescence levels (using dyes like propidium iodide (PI) and thiazole orange (TO)) were classified as DNA-positive.

Summary of Results

Hand rinses (washed/unwashed) primarily consist of anucleate corneocytes (dead skin cells), many of which stained positive for nucleic acids (DNA). This suggests residual DNA in corneocytes, possibly from degraded nuclear or mitochondrial fragments. Saliva contains nucleated epithelial cells, leukocytes, and DNA-positive debris, offering a mix of intact and fragmented DNA sources. Nasal lavage/eye wash show minimal cellular content, with fewer large cells compared to hands/saliva. Significant differences in large-cell percentages (7.4%–57.2%) were observed between donors, supporting a “shedder continuum” (variable shedding propensities) rather than distinct “shedder types.”

Raised Questions

DNA Content of Shed Corneocytes The study challenges the assumption that anucleate corneocytes (shed skin cells) contain negligible DNA. Further research is needed to evaluate the quantity, quality, and recoverability of DNA within these cells, as they dominate hand rinse samples and may be a significant source of touch DNA.

Cautionary Remarks

Staining specificity: DiamondDye’s broad fluorescence limits its utility, small sample size (n = 6 for inter-individual comparisons). Collection methods: Friction and protocol differences may influence cellular yields