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Persistence of touch DNA on burglary-related tools.

International Journal of Legal Medicine, 2017

Authors

Journal

International Journal of Legal Medicine


Study Design

Addressed Question

Assessment of background DNA on burglary-related tools

Activity Context

Burglary

Category

Background DNA

Specifications

BG on Personal ItemsIndividual CharacteristicsSurface

Variables of Interest

tool typeowners

Stringency of Control

Reality

Number of Individuals

10

Replicates per Individual and Condition

5

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)trace

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

N/A

Criteria for Shedder Status

good shedder = empirically known to transfer larger amounts of touch DNA

Previous Activities

N/A

Contact Scenario

regular household usage of tools - no usage for 2 weeks - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

various tools with different handle materials

Primary Substrate Material

Various

Deposit

regular usage

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

Sampled

Sampling Time

delayed

Persistence

no usage for min. 2 weeks

Sampling Method

swabbing (premoistened with lysis buffer)

Sampling Area

the whole tool handle

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

Maxwell extraction system, Maxwell 16 Blood DNA Purification kit

DNA Quantification

Plexor HY system , 7500 PCR Real Time system

Input for Profiling

set volume: 7 µl

Profiling

PowerPlex ESI 17 Fast in 12.5 µl reaction volume, 3130 Genetic Analyzer (Thermo Fisher), GeneMapperID v.3.2.1 software, threshold: 50rfu

Reference Samples

taken from all owners

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

comparison to reference profiles and determination completeness of known contributor's profiles (%unique alleles detected); reporting of a profile: both alleles in 4/8 and 7/13 markers determinable (alternatively: mixtures or n.d. in the case of at least 9 loci dropouts); matching: individual/major contributor in a profile that is reportable or all alleles (unique and shared) from a known contributor detected

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

1-2755 pg

Profile Quality

owner reportable in one third of profile, match with owner in half of samples; <15% not enough DNA for profile

Parameter Used for Comparison

profile completeness (= % unique alleles detected from all possible unique alleles), profile reporting (minimum requirement = both alleles in 4/8 and 7/13 markers determinable), matching (= database match from reported individual or major profile or detection of all alleles of a user)

Summary of Results

Tools, which belong to somebody and were not recently used may have an interpretable profile from its owner but do not need to; the detection of unknown major profiles is possible; significant difference between owners with some owners significantly more often matching their tools; no significant difference between tool types

Raised Questions

N/A

Cautionary Remarks

owner scenario not taken into consideration: did owners matching their tools more often use them more often/differently?; different criteria used for comparison (completeness of owner's profile, reporting, match), sometimes complicates understanding which criteria was used for comparison and why