Old meets New: Comparative examination of conventional and innovative RNA-based methods for body-fluid identification of laundered seminal fluid stains after modular extraction of DNA and RNA
FSI Genetics, 2018
Authors
Journal
FSI Genetics
Study Design
Addressed Question
possibility of STR profiling and body fluid identification from laundered semen stains
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
4 (min. 2 per experimental condition)
Replicates per Individual and Condition
2-4
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
healthy, non-azoospermic donors
Criteria for Shedder Status
N/A
Previous Activities
N/A
Contact Scenario
deposit of seminal fluid on clothing - washing scenario (1x or 2x) - (storage) - sampling
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
cotton and synthetic fabric cloths (13x18 cm)
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
20 or 100 µl deposit of seminal fluid
Delay
drying overnight
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
delayed
Persistence
storage: 30 days at room temperature (one set); washing procedure: standardized washing program in Hoover washing machine at 40°C (once) or 60°C (once or twice) or Miele washing machine (60°C, once or twice), laundry detergent: liquid detergent without phosphatases (machine 1), detergent powder from Persil (machine 2)
Sampling Method
direct extraction from clothing
Sampling Area
whole stained area (approx. 0.25 cm^2) or control area of the same size
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
successive DNA/RNA coextraction or RNA extraction only; DNA extraction: Maxwell 16 RSC Blood DNA kit (final volume: 60 µl), RNA: Maxwell 16 RSC RNA simply RNA tissue kit (final volume: 60 µl)
DNA Quantification
DNA: PowerQuant system; RNA: QuantiFluor RNA system
Input for Profiling
DNA: up to 450 pg or 10 µl of extract; mRNA: 12 µl extract for RT, 4 µl of RT product for profiling ; miRNA: 1-10 ng for RT, 1.33 µl of RT reaction product for qPCR
Profiling
DNA: Investigator ESSplex SE QS (29 cycles), ABI Prism 3130 Genetic analyzer, GeneMapper ID v3.2 (threshold: 50/150 rfu); mRNA: endpoint PCR according to Lindenbergh et al. (2012) using the markers KLK3, PRM1, SEMG1 and ACTB, 18SrRNA; miRNA: qPCR TaqMan universal PCR Master Mix and TaqMan Small RNA assay using hsa-miR-891a as a semen specific marker and RNU24 for normalization
Reference Samples
taken from donors
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
grading of profiles according to German database guidelines (reportable when >5/8 loci can be designated, informative but not reportable with fewer loci, not informative when too few alleles are detected)
RNA Data Interpretation
mRNA: observation of body-fluid specific peaks; miRNA: LinRegPCR for Cq-value computation, amplification considered as specific for Cq< 36
Results
DNA Quantity
60pg-30 ng after washing
Profile Quality
mostly reportable (81.3%) or informative (16.27%) profiles
Parameter Used for Comparison
DNA yield (pg/µl), DNA profile quality (grading according to German database guidelines), m/miRNA profiling success per marker, presumptive testing success rates
Summary of Results
DNA results: after washing, DNA amounts decreased for both fiber types proportionally to washing temperature with results from 100 µl deposits always higher than 20 µl deposits; differences were observed between the different washing machines with machine 2 resulting in lower DNA yields than machine 1; comparison between fibers: cotton retains DNA better than synthetic fibers; double washed stains show decreased DNA yields in comparison to stains washed only once; a 30d storage at room temperature prior to washing seems to increase DNA yield; reportable DNA profiles obtained in most cases, neither fabric nor washing temperature significantly influenced DNA profiling outcome; a lower initial deposit and double washing reduced DNA profiling success; transfer of seminal fluids in the washing machine to unstained areas of the clothing was observed in 4/6 negative samples (all in the uninformative category); Body fluid identification: after washing, visualization of stains using an ALS was no longer possible, the Phosphatesmo test stripe (AP) gave exclusively negative results, immunochromatographic PSA detection was negative for all samples (except after mere RNA extraction), RSID testing was positive in 78-85.7% of samples and HY-liter evaluation of spermatozoa gave positive results in all situations (with sperm counts mostly correlating with DNA yield); mRNA: most samples showed RNA yields below the detection limit, RNA yield was higher for samples after mere RNA extraction than after modular DNA-/RNA extraction, samples washed at 40°C yielded positive results only for PRM1 and 18SrRNA (modular DNA/RNA extraction as well as mere RNA extraction) showing a variable stability for mRNA markers, samples washed at 60°C and samples washed twice were mostly completely negative with sporadically positive results for samples stored for 30days at room temperature and samples washed once in machine 1 at 60°C, transfer of RNA to non-stained clothing areas was observed in 1 case; miRNA: Cq values for miR-891a were only sporadically below 36 (mostly in 100 µl positive control and few laundered samples), the normalization marker RNU24 was not detected in any sample
Raised Questions
further testings on aged and degraded samples to determine whether miRNA analysis can prevail against mRNA analysis; research into adjustment and harmonization of RNA interpretation guidelines
Cautionary Remarks
N/A