mRNA-based skin identification for forensic applications
International Journal of Legal Medicine, 2011
Authors
Journal
International Journal of Legal Medicine
Study Design
Addressed Question
analysis of sensitivity of the identified skin mRNA markers
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
5
Replicates per Individual and Condition
1-2
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
good, medium and poor shedders
Criteria for Shedder Status
determined by the overall success rate of amplification of the target and reference genes (data n.s.)
Previous Activities
N/A
Contact Scenario
deposit of thumbprint - sampling
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
slide
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
thumbprint
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
Persistence
N/A
Sampling Method
double swabbing (moistening agent: lysis buffer, cotton or flocked swabs) or Pinpoint Slide RNA Isolation System
Sampling Area
full, half and quarter thumbprints
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
Pinpoint Slide RNA Isolation SystemII
DNA Quantification
RNA: NanoDrop ND-1000 spectrophotometer
Input for Profiling
5-11 µl total RNA for cDNA synthesis, 5µl of undiluted cDNA for RNA profiling
Profiling
RNA: qPCR of: CDSN, KRT9, LOR and ACTB
Reference Samples
N/A
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
N/A
RNA Data Interpretation
dCt for skin-specific mRNA markers <2.7 counts as skin identified
Results
DNA Quantity
N/A
Profile Quality
full profile detected in full thumbprints, CDSN even detected in quarter thumbprints
Parameter Used for Comparison
Ct, dCt
Summary of Results
Pinpoint method only sampling method that allows reliable detection of skin-specific mRNA markers (data n.s.); from full thumbprints, almost all markers always detected (Ct<40) and skin identified (dCt<2.7); Ct increased with decreasing sampling area more than expected (possible reason: stochastic limit of qPCR reached, differences in initial deposit amount) resulting in excessive variation and dropout of skin-specific markers; positive CDSN amplification in all samples even from quarter thumbprints; suggested detection limits: 35 cycles for ACTB, 40 cycles for target genes
Raised Questions
a larger dataset should be used to precisely define more specific detection limits
Cautionary Remarks
no precise guideline for the detection of skin described: dCt threshold? Detection of one or all skin-specific mRNA markers?; a role of different shedder statuses is mentioned but not further discussed; mixtures of body fluids and sensitivity after DNA/RNA coextraction not analyzed