Investigation into the usefulness of DNA profiling of earprints
Science & Justice, 2007
Authors
Journal
Science & Justice
Study Design
Addressed Question
Investigation of the sources of unknown DNA profile components within earprints
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
10 individuals, 9 telephones
Replicates per Individual and Condition
1
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
N/A
Criteria for Shedder Status
N/A
Previous Activities
telephone usage before swabbing recorded
Contact Scenario
swabbing of background DNA on ears and single as well as multiple user telephones
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
body part: telephone dominant ear, telephone
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
regular activities, regular use by single or multiple user
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
Sampling Time
direct/delayed
Persistence
N/A
Sampling Method
Swabbing (cotton swab moistened with sterile H2O)
Sampling Area
swabbing of ears and telephone earpieces
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
QIAamp DNA micro kit -swab protocol (final volume: 60 µl)
DNA Quantification
N/A
Input for Profiling
set volume: 5 µl
Profiling
AmpFlSTR SGM Plus PCR amplification kit, final reaction volume of 12.5 µl, 34 cycle LCN protocol; ABI Prism 377 DNA Sequencer, GeneScan software version 2.1, Genotyper software version 3.7, threshold: 50 rfu, stutter threshold: 20 %, duplicate amplifications
Reference Samples
taken from all depositors and laboratory staff
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
profiles individually evaluated by two analysts, consensus profiles from duplicate amplification, comparison to reference profiles for number of donor and non-donor alleles
RNA Data Interpretation
N/A
Results
DNA Quantity
N/A
Profile Quality
mostly full donor profiles with foreign DNA contribution
Parameter Used for Comparison
number of donor and non-donor alleles
Summary of Results
multi-user phones showed evidence of mixed DNA profiles, single user phones mostly showed evidence of single DNA profiles; swabbing donor ears resulted in full donor DNA profiles in all cases with evidence of foreign DNA contribution in 6/10 cases; non-donor alleles present in cases with and without previous public phone usage or physical contact with other individuals; usage of multi-user telephones and recent physical contact seems to contribute to foreign DNA on ears
Raised Questions
N/A
Cautionary Remarks
sampled phones not used by sampled individuals, thus transfer of foreign DNA from phones to ears hypothesized and not experimentally proven