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Transfer and persistence of DNA on the hands and the influence of activities performed

FSI Genetics, 2017

Study Design

Addressed Question

influence of activities on primary and secondary DNA transfer

Activity Context

Social Contact

Category

PersistencePrimary DepositTransfer Scenario

Specifications

Individual CharacteristicsPersistence with Further ContactPersistence with TimePrevious ActivitiesTransfer via Handshake

Variables of Interest

time after handshakeactivities after handshakenumber of touched items

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

6x2

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

N/A

Criteria for Shedder Status

good shedder: consistent high contribution to deposited and contributed profiles

Previous Activities

varying (not predefined, reported)

Contact Scenario

handshake - (delay) - handprint deposition on 5 items - sampling of depositor's hand

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

body part: hands

Primary Substrate Material

Skin

Deposit

handshake 10s

Delay

0, 15 min (normal activities (reported))

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

glass plate

Secondary Substrate Material

Glass

Secondary Substrate Contact

hand deposit 10s

Further Transfer

contacting 5 consecutive glass plates

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Negative (Confirmed)

Sampling Time

direct

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

Swabbing (wet cotton)

Sampling Area

14x22cm^2 glass surfaces, palmar surface of the hands

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

DNA IQ

DNA Quantification

Quantifiler, ABI PRISM 7500

Input for Profiling

0.5 ng or 15 µl of DNA template

Profiling

PowerPlex 21, 3500xL Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper ID-X software, threshold: 175/2000 rfu

Reference Samples

taken from depositors and contributors

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

minimum number of contributors determined by locus-specific peak height ratios, LR calculations and mixture proportions for depositor and known contributor using STRmix software v2.0.6, Allele contribution (determination of unique allele contribution for known contributors in relation to total number of unique alleles), Peak height contribution (total peak height of unique alleles divided by number of unique alleles)

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

0-6.65 ng on glass plates, 3.88-68.49 on hands

Profile Quality

interpretable profiles (single source to four-person mixture) in most cases, mixture not always resolvable

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA yield, No of contributors, LRs for known contributors, Allele contribution (determination of unique allele contribution for known contributors in relation to total number of unique alleles), Peak height contribution (total peak height of unique alleles divided by number of unique alleles)

Summary of Results

depositor mostly included but on some occasions excluded from own handprint; stronger support and less variation for depositor present in own handprint 15min post handshake; The known contributor was excluded from handprint in 80/87% of cases immediately/15 min after handshake, with a decreasing inclusion as contacts increased in cases where known contributor was detected; more self alleles as well as more unknown alleles are detected on hands than on handprints; on avg. 3 person mixtures detected on hands; transfer from right to left hand was not observed within the 15 min interval; interindividual comparisons suggest the presence of good and bad shedders with good shedders consistently contributing more DNA to the hand deposits; good shedding ability also increases transferability to objects and secondary transfer; the amount of contacts does not decrease the amount of deposited DNA (peak heights) but the amount of unique alleles and therefore LRs; pre-handshake activities: no significant influence from time since handwashing or any other pre-handshake activity (not controlled); post hand-shake activities influencing secondary transfer: limited use of (parts of) the hand, consistent contact with the same object or reusage of first object touched after handshake ('DNA parking')

Raised Questions

categorization of individuals according to their shedding ability, prevalence of good and poor shedders in the population, greater knowledge on the persistence of non-self DNA on the hands after different periods of time, activities and within environments

Cautionary Remarks

authors sometimes talk of 'more self DNA' when actually relatively more self DNA was considered (absolute amount of self DNA (=relative proportion x total DNA recovery) not calculated); it does not become clear which pre-handshake activities other than handwashing have been taken into consideration