dnatrack is a work in progress — updates ship daily. Report a bug or request a feature →

Persistence of DNA deposited by the original user on objects after subsequent use by a second person

FSI Genetics, 2014

Study Design

Addressed Question

Persistence of DNA of regular user (uncontrolled deposit) on different substrates after being used by second user

Activity Context

Theft

Category

PersistencePrimary Deposit

Specifications

ContactPersistence with Further ContactSurface

Variables of Interest

time and manner of use by first and second userobjects

Stringency of Control

Close to Realistic

Number of Individuals

46

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)skin (arms)trace

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

N/A

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

varying (not predefined)

Contact Scenario

regular usage by first user for varying amount of time (recorded) - usage by second user for varying amount of time (recorded)

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

personal items (lanyards, watches, wallets, USB sticks, cosmetics, purses, pens, keyrings, gloves, hats, belts, shoes)

Primary Substrate Material

Various

Deposit

personal usage, varying (recorded)

Delay

N/A

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

N/A

Secondary Substrate Material

N/A

Secondary Substrate Contact

varying usage by second individual, many different contact types (recorded)

Further Transfer

N/A

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Present

Sampling Time

n.s. (most likely delayed)

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

double swabbing cotton swabs (wet + dry) for smooth objects, tapelifting for porous objects,

Sampling Area

N/A

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

DNA IQ (Biomed Nxp liquid handling platform)

DNA Quantification

Quantifiler (Biomek Nxp liquid handling platform)

Input for Profiling

N/A

Profiling

AmpFlSTR Profiler Plus, ABI PRISM 3130x genetic analyzer, GeneMapper ID v3.2 Threshold: 50 rfu

Reference Samples

buccal swabbings from first and 2nd users

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

comparison to reference profiles and determination of relative profiles contribution based on peak heights

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

average porous surfaces: 31.37 ng; average non-porous surfaces: 2.57 ng

Profile Quality

high variability, decline in profiles from the first and incline in profiles from second user with time, full replacement on hard, non-porous surfaces likely

Parameter Used for Comparison

% contribution from known (users) and unknown sources depending on relative peak heights at all informative loci for known contributors and unknown sources

Summary of Results

many item-specific findings, general observations: background DNA of unknown alleles is higher on porous surfaces compared to non-porous substrates; porous substrates have more capacity to accumulate DNA; DNA on non-porous substrates is less persistent when friction is involved; the proportions of first and second wearer depend on the sampled area; Alleles of unknown source are frequent but rarely exceed 10 % of the total RFU; and many more findings about specific items (Supplementary Table with handling/wearing of items and profiling results)

Raised Questions

influence of the sampling technique?

Cautionary Remarks

for comparison between porous and non-porous substrates: many other factors may also play a role (were sampling areas comparable? (n.s.), unequal sampling and extraction/efficiencies, unequal distribution of usage scenarios,…); many items sampled but grouping and identification of trends is mainly left to the reader