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Investigation into the usefulness of DNA profiling of earprints

Science & Justice, 2007

Study Design

Addressed Question

Investigation of the sources of unknown DNA profile components within earprints

Activity Context

None

Category

Background DNA

Specifications

BG on Personal ItemsBG on Public ItemsBG on Skin / Other Body Locations

Variables of Interest

sampling locationindividual's previous activitiesusual telephone usage scenario

Stringency of Control

Reality

Number of Individuals

10 individuals, 9 telephones

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

ear

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

Skin

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

Sampled

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