Persistence of DNA on clothes after exposure to water for different time periods — a study on bathtub , pond , and river.
International Journal of Legal Medicine, 2018
Authors
Journal
International Journal of Legal Medicine
Study Design
Addressed Question
persistence of DNA stains under different conditions involving water
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
5
Replicates per Individual and Condition
min. 2
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
4 females, one male, 30-59 years, without any known skin disease
Criteria for Shedder Status
N/A
Previous Activities
N/A
Contact Scenario
stain deposition - exposition of stain to water - drying - sampling
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
7x6cm cotton fabric cloth
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
rubbing to neck skin 5s or 1.5 ml fresh, venous blood
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
water submersion: tap water hot and cold, 10s-10 min; bathtub with and without soap, 10 min-1 months; pond in summer and winter, 5 min-6 months; river in summer and winter, 5 min-1 month
Sampling Method
tape-lifting of cotton cloths and swabbing of tapes with swabs moistened with lysis buffer
Sampling Area
7x6cm^2 textile cotton cloths
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
phenol chloroform extraction or Maxwell 16 instrument (no significant differences between both methods)
DNA Quantification
PowerQuant system
Input for Profiling
150 pg or up to 8µl of DNA template
Profiling
Powerplex ESX17fast with reduced PCR volume (12.5 µl), ABI3130 Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper ID software v3.2, threshold: 50 rfu
Reference Samples
buccal swabs taken from all depositors
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
presence of reference alleles: complete profile, partial profile (> half of expected alleles), no profile (<half of expected alleles)
RNA Data Interpretation
N/A
Results
DNA Quantity
0-610.8 ng for blood, 0-105.2 ng for skin cell samples
Profile Quality
full profiles, profile completeness decreasing over time
Parameter Used for Comparison
profile quality (complete profile, partial profile (> half of expected alleles), no profile (<half of expected alleles); threshold of complete profiles = timepoint until when complete profiles were still obtainable
Summary of Results
threshold of complete profile: tap water not reached, bathtub: 1 week, pond in summer 4h, river in summer 4h, pond in winter 14d, river in winter 34 h; tap water: CorPP detectable in about 50% of samples after 10 min (no longer periods tested), water temperature does not seem to have a significant impact; bathtub: no significant difference between with and without soap; pond and river: percentage of complete profiles higher in standing water than in river, significantly longer survival spans in winter, detection thresholds for blood and epithelial cells roughly the same; additional alleles detected in 20% of samples (1-10 alleles), treated as artefacts or weak contaminations, not analyzed any further; conclusion: it is possible to retrieve DNA sufficient to produce complete STR profiles from blood as well as epithelial cells adhering to clothing after exposure to water for a considerable period of time
Raised Questions
N/A
Cautionary Remarks
possibility of DNA transfer between different cloths?; negative controls from water not taken; degradation of DNA vs. DNA loss?; development of DNA quantities over time not shown