Shedder status: Exploring means of determination
Science & Justice, 2021
Authors
Journal
Science & Justice
Study Design
Addressed Question
investigation of shedder status and methods of determining shedder status for forensic investigation, impact of various factors like washing, health, and environmental conditions on shedder status. Exploration of shedder categorization methods, shedder testing procedures, and the maintenance of shedder status over time
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
10
Replicates per Individual and Condition
Hand Deposits: 12; Other Body Areas (Neck, Upper Arm, Lower Arm, Forehead): 2; Direct Hand Sampling (Post-Glove Wear or Direct Collection): 2; Time Intervals Post-Hand Washing: 2; Fonneløp Shedder Test Adaptation: 12 (one hand) –24 (both hands)
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
high, intermediate and low shedders, no further information specified
Criteria for Shedder Status
DNA quantity (total DNA, donor-derived DNA), profile quality (% donor alleles, peak heights, mixture proportions), and consistency across repeated deposits
Previous Activities
n.s.; for time after hand-washing: 2, 15, 30, and 60 minutes after hand washing (soap and warm water); for gloves-wearing: wearing gloves 30 min during office work
Contact Scenario
Handprints (10-second contact with pressure) were deposited on glass plates. For consecutive deposits, participants touched 10 consecutive plates 30 minutes post-washing
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
glass plates; nitrile gloves; Body parts (hands, neck, arms, forehead)
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
Handprints on glass plates via 10 seconds of direct contact with applied pressure; by wearing nitrile gloves
Delay
Deposits occurred at 2, 15, 30, and 60 minutes post-hand washing (soap and warm water, no standardized technique) on two separate days; For consecutive deposits, participants touched 10 consecutive glass plates 30 minutes after hand washing
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
N/A
Sampling Method
cotton swabs (150CIS) and a wet/dry double swabbing method under medium pressure
Sampling Area
body areas: 5x5cm^2; hands: Ventral side of the left and right palms (including fingers); gloves: Inner surfaces of gloves (ventral palm and finger regions); glass plates: entire plates
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
DNA IQ™ kit was employed for DNA extraction, elution volume 60 µl
DNA Quantification
Quantifiler Trio™ kit (Applied Biosystems)
Input for Profiling
a.p.m.i.: 0.5 ng or max 15 µl
Profiling
PowerPlex 21, 3500xL Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper Idx, threshold: 175 rfu
Reference Samples
taken from all participants
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
mixture proportions using STRmix, total DNA quantity, number of donor alleles, percentage of donor alleles, and donor allele peak height (RFU) (average RFU of donor alleles was calculated by dividing the donor’s total RFU by the total number of their detected alleles), major contributor was defined as an individual contributing >70% of the total DNA in a mixture. Contributions below this threshold were considered unresolved or minor
RNA Data Interpretation
N/A
Results
DNA Quantity
High shedders: 4.6–96.6 ng (depending on body area), Low shedders: 0.08–27.3 ng, Intermediate shedders: 0.40–5.4 ng (glass plates) or 2.01–49.86 ng (direct swabs), Significant intra- and inter-participant variability, particularly in direct hand swabs
Profile Quality
Handprints on Glass Plates: High Shedders: high-quality profiles with 99% of donor alleles detected , average peak heights of ~3000 RFU, and major contributor status (average Mx 97%), Low Shedders: Lower-quality profiles with 43% of donor alleles detected , average peak heights of ~309 RFU, and minor or unresolvable mixtures (average Mx 74%); Direct Hand Swabs (Palms/Fingers): All participants produced complete donor profiles (100% donor alleles detected), but shedder categories could not be distinguished based on DNA quantity or profile quality; Body Area Swabs: Forehead: High shedders produced high-quality profiles (95–100% donor alleles, 1624–4066 RFU), while low/intermediate shedders had lower contributions (27.3 ng and 2.04 ng total DNA; Neck/Arms: Profiles varied widely; Post-Glove Hand Swabs: Profiles were complex, showed increased donor DNA contributions (47–50 ng) but did not align with shedder categories from glass plates; Post-Hand Washing: High Shedders: Recovered DNA quality improved over time (e.g., Participant D: 3263 RFU at 60 min vs. 2491 RFU at 2 min),Low Shedders: Minimal recovery (e.g., Participant J: 0.06 ng DNA, 25% donor alleles at 60 min)
Parameter Used for Comparison
Total DNA amount, Donor DNA amount, Mixture Proportions, No. Of Contributors, % Donor alleles, Donor allele height
Summary of Results
Shedder status determined via handprints (e.g., glass plates) did not correlate with DNA collected from gloves, body areas, or direct hand swabs, No standardized thresholds exist for categorizing shedder status, and results vary with profiling methods/sample types, Differences between individuals (e.g., DNA quantity, profile quality) were greater than variations within individuals over time
Raised Questions
reliability of shedder status assessments in forensic casework?
Cautionary Remarks
N/A