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Recovery of Trace DNA on Clothing: A Comparison of Mini-tape Lifting and Three Other Forensic Evidence Collection Techniques

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2017

Authors

Journal

Journal of Forensic Sciences


Study Design

Addressed Question

investigating recovery of touch DNA from different items of clothing and comparison of sampling methods for obtaining most informative profiles from touch DNA on touched clothes

Activity Context

Assault

Category

Primary DepositRecovery

Specifications

BG on ClothingContactDNA ProfilingSampling

Variables of Interest

recovery of DNA from different items of clothingsampling technique

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

3 wearers; 3 "perpetrators"

Replicates per Individual and Condition

3

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

"perpetrators": 1 female (bad shedder), 2 males (good shedders); "victims"/wearers: 2 males, 1 female

Criteria for Shedder Status

depositing mostly full (good shedder) or mostly partial (poor shedders) profiles throughout this experiment

Previous Activities

2x machine-washing of clothes (all together, 70mL laundry detergent, 40°C, 70min)

Contact Scenario

grabbing the clothing with two hands for 5sec. Triplicates done with at least 15min inbetween deposits without hand-washing

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

T-Shirt, Sweatshirt; T-Shirt, Swearshirt; Top, Jumper; Cardigan, Jumper; Jeans; Raincoat

Primary Substrate Material

CottonDenimFabricNylonPolyesterVarious

Deposit

grabbing clothes with two hands for approx. 5s

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

N/A

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

comparison: swabbing (cotton) wet and dry (both moderate pressure and rotating), scraping, mini-tape lifting

Sampling Area

entire contact zones: 30-40cm2

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

conventional Chelex extraction folowed by ultrafiltration, extraction volume 100 µl

DNA Quantification

N/A

Input for Profiling

5 µl sample, total volume 25 µl

Profiling

SEfiler plus Multiplex Kit (Applied Biosystems)

Reference Samples

obtained from participants and staff

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

comparison to reference profiles; calculation of relative standard deviation of counted alleles

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

N/A

Profile Quality

strong variation in profile quality within triplipcates (relative standard deviation 0-173%)

Parameter Used for Comparison

% of known individual's alleles detected

Summary of Results

scraping and mini-tape lifting methods yielded in higher DNA-recovery irrespective of clothing items. However, the authors prefer mini-tape lifting as it is easier and faster to apply. The recovery rate seemed to depend on the "perpetrator" themselves (good vs. Bad shedder). 40% of all samples showed additional alleles, some could be assigned to "victims" (wearers of clothes), some to laboratory staff, and some to no known profiles.

Raised Questions

N/A

Cautionary Remarks

DNA not quantified, few replicates (n=3)