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Opportunistic crimes: Evaluation of DNA from regularly-used knives after a brief use by a different person

FSI Genetics, 2019

Study Design

Addressed Question

DNA transfer to a regularly-used knife by brief contact from a second user

Activity Context

Stabbing

Category

PersistencePrimary Deposit

Specifications

ContactPersistence with Further Contact

Variables of Interest

individualduration of contact

Stringency of Control

Close to Realistic

Number of Individuals

2x4

Replicates per Individual and Condition

3

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

N/A

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

no contact with other study participants, no handwashing in the hour prior to contacting to the knife

Contact Scenario

regular-usage scenario - second user contact (2/30/60s) - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

plastic-handled steak knives

Primary Substrate Material

Plastic

Deposit

regular-usage scenario: total of 4 min handling across two days

Delay

1 day

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

N/A

Secondary Substrate Material

N/A

Secondary Substrate Contact

stabbing motion by second individual for 2s / 30s / 60s with a 1 stab per 2s rate

Further Transfer

N/A

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Negative (Confirmed)

Sampling Time

direct

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

mini-tape

Sampling Area

knife handle

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

QIAamp DNA Investigator Kit

DNA Quantification

Quantifiler Human DNA quantification kit

Input for Profiling

10 µl of DNA extract

Profiling

AmpFlSTR NGM Select kit, DNA Analyzer 3730xl, GeneMapper 4.0 software, analytical threshold: 100 rfu

Reference Samples

buccal swabs obtained from all participants

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

comparison to reference profiles, determination of relative profile contribution by relative peak height contributions from unique alleles averaged across all STR loci

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

positive controls (regular-usage only): avg. of 1.2-9.1 ng per knife handle; up to 12 ng after stabbing scenario (avg. values n.s.)

Profile Quality

positive controls: >80% contribution from regular user; increasing relative contribution of second individual with increased handling times for most proband pairs

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA yield, relative profile contribution (based on unique allelic peak heights), total DNA yield per contributor

Summary of Results

positive controls (knives handled only in regular usage scenarios) showed variable DNA yields for each of the four contributors with low foreign contributions (except for one individual where the individual's partner contributed on average 16% of DNA to the profile); after stabbing, for three out of four volunteers, the relative profile contribution from regular user and second individual changed from 4:1 (2s) to 2:1 (30s) to 1:1 (60s) and significantly correlated with handling time; no such increase in relative profile contribution was observed for the fourth individual, where the proportion of the regular user remained at >80%, irrespective of the second user's handling time; with time, a decrease in total DNA yield attributable to the regular user was observed for three out of 4 proband pairs, whereas the DNA yield attributable to the second user was not significantly correlated with stabbing time, thus, the increased relative profile contributions of the second user resulted from a decrease in original user's DNA amounts and not from an increase in second user's DNA; for the fourth individual, an unexpected increase of the amounts of DNA attributable to the regular user were observed with stabbing time, esp. after 60s; regular user's and second individual's DNA amounts were significantly higher than DNA amounts attributable to unknown sources (except for the second user's DNA amounts after 30s of stabbing); an average of 1.3 contributors was detected in the unknown component in positive controls as well as knifes handled by a second individual

Raised Questions

possibility of using DNA yields attributable to each contributor or relative proportions to distinguish between deposition modes; further investigation of observed trends using a larger sample size including individuals with different shedder status and real used knifes as well as other items

Cautionary Remarks

necessity of further investigation with a larger sample size; estimating the relative profile contribution based on unique allelic peak heights leads to an underestimation of the profile contribution from unknown source