Shedding light on the relative DNA contribution of two persons handling the same object.
FSI Genetics, 2016
Study Design
Addressed Question
relative contribution of two persons after handling an object
Activity Context
Category
Specifications
Variables of Interest
Stringency of Control
Number of Individuals
7-11x2
Replicates per Individual and Condition
1
Nucleic Acid
Bodily Origin
Depositor & Contact
Depositor Characteristics
14 laboratory members (6 men, 8 women)
Criteria for Shedder Status
showing a tendency to always be minor or major contributor of mixture regardless of being first or second user
Previous Activities
handwashing before handling
Contact Scenario
precleaning object - handling by first for min 20 min for 8/10 consecutive days - delay - handwashing - handling by second user - sampling
Primary Substrate
Primary Substrate Type
personal items: plastic computer mouse and pen, metal key, nitrile glove, fabric nurse cap, plastic bracelets, metal necklace, metal watch
Primary Substrate Material
Deposit
handling/wearing on 8/10 consecutive days for min 20 min (recorded)
Delay
min 4 h (conditions n.s.)
Secondary Substrate
Secondary Substrate Type
N/A
Secondary Substrate Material
N/A
Secondary Substrate Contact
handling/wearing for 5, 30, 120 min
Further Transfer
N/A
Sampling
Background DNA on Sampled Surface
Sampling Time
delayed
Persistence
24-36 h in paper bags
Sampling Method
double swabbing, direct extraction from nurse cap
Sampling Area
entire (inner) surface of objects, 10x2cm^2 skin contact area from nurse cap
Laboratory Analysis
Extraction
manual extraction QIAShredder/QIAamp DNA mini protocol and Amicon Ultra-0.5 30 K, phenol chloroform extraction for nurse cap
DNA Quantification
Quantiplex Hyres (Qiagen), AB 7500 Real-time PCR
Input for Profiling
approx. 1 ng in 25 µl for all samples
Profiling
AmpFlSTR NGM SELect kit (27 and 30 cycles LCN), ABI PRISM 3130xI Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper ID v3.2.1, Threshold: 50 rfu, 15 % stutter limit, reproducibility across replicate amplification
Reference Samples
taken from buccal swabs from all participants and laboratory personnel
Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis
determining full and partial profiles based on duplicate amplifications and reproducibility of results; relative profile contributions of first and second users based on relative RFU contribution after comparison to reference profiles
RNA Data Interpretation
N/A
Results
DNA Quantity
nurse cap: 11.5-200 ng, computer mouse, metal keys: 10 ng, other objects: < 10 ng
Profile Quality
completeness n.s., single source profile (1 %), two-source-mixture (31 %), complex DNA profiles (68 %): limited number of reproducible extra alleles (average relative proportion <10%)
Parameter Used for Comparison
% relative profile contribution based on average %rfu for all informative autosomal STR loci, DNA yield
Summary of Results
High variability of DNA contribution levels, over time: increase DNA contribution of second user, decline of first user; Dependent on: object used, individuals involved, differences in individual activities; extraneous DNA (introduced by secondary transfer) ranging between 2-10 % (exceeding first and second user in 1-7%, mostly partial/full minor profile); possibility of single source profile after two handlings not completely excluded (1 %); some individuals show tendency to always be minor or major contributor; no significant difference in amount of DNA after different handling/wearing times; indirect transfer scenarios from individuals involved in the experiment but not in the specific transfer scenarios were observed on a few occasions (4%)
Raised Questions
presence of DNA saturation effect (sum of first and second users DNA remaining approx. Equal); how to assess information regarding biological source and estimation of deposition time; more factors influencing DNA deposition: substrate surfaces, variable manner of contact, timing between DNA deposition and sample collection, exposure to real casework conditions
Cautionary Remarks
contact between individuals during experiment not excluded and even likely (contact in common places e.g. cafeteria), secondary transfer events between experiments observed in 4 cases; contact scenario supposed to be realistic, but handwashing before every contact event cannot be considered realistic; more detailed analysis of experiments from Oldoni et al (2015)