dnatrack is a work in progress — updates ship daily. Report a bug or request a feature →

Unintentional effects of cleaning a crime scene - when the sponge becomes an accomplice in DNA transfer

International Journal of Legal Medicine, 2018

Study Design

Addressed Question

persistence and transfer of DNA traces cleaned with a sponge

Activity Context

None

Category

PersistenceTransfer Scenario

Specifications

Persistence with DecontaminationPersistence with Water ImmersionTransfer via Vector

Variables of Interest

Bodily Originprimary substrate surfacecleaning agent

Stringency of Control

Close to Realistic

Number of Individuals

5

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

bloodcontrol DNAsalivaskin (hand)skin (neck)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

five individuals of different age (25-60) and gender, without any known skin disease

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

N/A

Contact Scenario

deposit of biological material on primary substrate - (drying) - cleaning surface with sponge - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

smooth plastic tabletop (45x45cm^2), rough chair upholstery (45x45cm^2)

Primary Substrate Material

FabricPlastic

Deposit

100 µl blood, 150 µl saliva, skin deposits by pressing hand with an average pressure of 15N onto surface or by rubbing area with abrasions of neck skin cells on clothes with an average pressure of 15N, 10 ng in 100 µl cell line DNA

Delay

blood: direct or left to dry for 30 min or 16 h; saliva: left to dry for 16 h; cell line DNA and skin cells: direct

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

fabric towel soaked with water or soap and water

Secondary Substrate Material

Fabric

Secondary Substrate Contact

wiping entire substrate

Further Transfer

wiping entire substrate area from first to third sampling area in zigzag motion

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Negative (Confirmed)

Sampling Time

direct

Persistence

cleaning agent: water or soap added to water

Sampling Method

plastic surface: DNA-free swabs; upholstery and towel: taping with Heros transparency film and swabbing of tapes

Sampling Area

taking samples from upper right, lower left and lower right corner of primary substrate area and from towel (exact size of sampling areas n.s.)

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

DNA IQ Casework Pro Kit and Casework Extraction Kit in the Maxwell 16 instrument, final volume: 50 µl

DNA Quantification

PowerQuant system

Input for Profiling

N/A

Profiling

Powerplex ESX17 fast, ABI3500 Genetic Analyzer with GeneMapper ID-X software

Reference Samples

obtained from all participants

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

comparison to reference profiles and determination of profile completeness (as described previously) regardless of additional peaks: complete profile - each allele of individual detected, partial profile - each allele detected in more than half of the evaluable loci, no profile - alleles in less than half of the evaluable loci

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

0-0.0037 ng/µl from epithelial cells on plastic, 0.00036-0.025 ng/µl from epithelial cells on textile, 0.0097-4.31 ng/µl from saliva on plastic, 0-0.105 ng/µl from saliva on textile, 0.018-0.488 ng/µl from blood on plastic

Profile Quality

mostly complete profile from all sampling sites from saliva and blood, mostly no profiles from epithelial cells

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA yield (ng/µl), profile completeness (complete, partial, no profile)

Summary of Results

samples from blood and saliva generally resulted in higher DNA concentrations than samples from epithelial cells; samples from epithelial cells did not result in complete profiles and rarely showed partial profiles; more partial profiles obtained from textile samples compared to plastic table samples, which is in line with previous findings of absorbent material being more DNA affine than smooth plastic surfaces; distribution of partial profiles across the primary substrate area did not show a correlation with the wiping order; slight reduction of DNA yields from epithelial cells observed in the presence of soap; experiments with cell line DNA, blood and saliva show that a redistribution of biological material is possible via wiping over a rather large surface; experiments with blood showed complete profiles from every sampling location on plastic table (fabric surface not tested) regardless of drying time and presence or absence of soap; experiments with saliva showed complete profiles from every sampling location on plastic table, less extensive distribution via wiping was observed on a rough fabric chair upholstery (complete profiles in 46% of samples) with decreasing DNA yields from samples further away from deposition area, possible explanation: high DNA affinity of textile surfaces, soaking of liquid saliva into the upholstery preventing dispersal; fabric towel used for wiping provided a complete profile in every experiment; for saliva samples, no differences between samples with and without addition of soap were observed

Raised Questions

N/A

Cautionary Remarks

limited capacity of comparison between samples using profile completeness as complete profiles can be obtained from relatively low DNA input amounts, DNA yield not shown for individual samples