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Potential DNA mixtures introduced through kissing

International Journal of Legal Medicine, 1998

Authors

Journal

International Journal of Legal Medicine


Study Design

Addressed Question

investigating the possibility of obtaining mixed DNA samples from saliva samples after kissing

Activity Context

Kissing

Category

PersistencePrimary Deposit

Specifications

Persistence with Regular ActivitiesPersistence with Time

Variables of Interest

time since kissing

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

5 pairs

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNAmtDNAY-Chromosome

Bodily Origin

saliva

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

N/A

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

N/A

Contact Scenario

kissing scenario - delay - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

body part: oral cavity

Primary Substrate Material

Mucosa

Deposit

kissing

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

Present

Sampling Time

direct, delayed

Persistence

time: 1, 5, 10, 30, 60 min, no eating and drinking

Sampling Method

cotton swab only absorbing liquid saliva from oral cavity (no touching of oral mucosa)

Sampling Area

liquid saliva from the oral cavity

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

Chelex, final volume: 200 µl

DNA Quantification

N/A

Input for Profiling

5 µl extract

Profiling

STR typing of three STR loci: ACTBP2, FGA, VWA; saliva samples from female partners also Y-STR typed: DYS390, mtDNA: sequencing of HV1 region

Reference Samples

taken from all participants

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

comparison to reference profiles

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

50-1200 ng/200 µl extract

Profile Quality

mostly donor profiles only, mixed samples obtained max. 60s after kissing

Parameter Used for Comparison

number of non-donor alleles, Y-STR and mtDNA profiling results

Summary of Results

Mixed DNA patterns obtained rarely and only from samples taken max. 60s after kissing; more non-donor alleles found in female samples, thus males might transfer more DNA via kissing; Conclusion: contamination via kissing possible but restricted to short time period after kiss (when present, mixtures were always clearly resolvable); Y-STR profiles where only obtained when STR-typing also showed a mixture; no correlation between concentration of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA detected; mixtures ratios hard to interpret from mtDNA

Raised Questions

N/A

Cautionary Remarks

no statistical analysis performed; maximum chance-carry-over kissing scenario; kissing scenario results n.s.