Forensics Serology
Forensic Serology Analysis and screening of body fluids Usually hand-in-hand with DNA analysis
Common Cases Most involve sexual assaults (sexual assault kits, complainant clothing, bedding, suspect clothing) Others: homicides, aggravated assault, burglaries (blood from crime scene, clothing, weapons, etc)
Collecting Specimens If its small enough, its simply brought to the lab Otherwise, collected on a cotton swab or part of the evidence with bodily fluid is cut off from the item for submission
Bodily Fluids Blood Semen Saliva Sweat Feces Urine
Excreted vs. Secreted Excretion is the removal of material Sweat, breast milk, earwax, feces, chyme, bile, vomit, aqueous humour (watery substance that covers the eye), sebum (skin oil), urine Secretion is movement of material from one point to another Blood/plasma, semen, saliva, serum
Testing Definitive – The sample is definitely the specific target and cannot possibly be something else Presumptive The sample is definitely not a certain substance The sample is probably the substance
Saliva Tests Reveal Disease markers (HIV, cancer) Viral infections Presence of therapeutic & illicit drugs (only 12-24 hours) (THC, heroine, cocaine, amphetamines)
Saliva 99.5% - water 0.5% - electrolytes, mucus, glycoproteins, enzymes, and antibacterial compounds Humans produce 1.0 – 1.5 L a day! Alpha-amylase – breaks down complex carbohydrates into smaller sugar molecules (breaks down starch) B-amylase: Plant & bacterial sources A-amylase: HSA (human saliva), HPA (human pancreas)
Alpha-Amylase Overlay– Presumptive Assay Qualitative only (positive or negative) Spray a Whatman paper circle with solution of soluble starch Lay the paper down over the suspected saliva stain Leave in contact with stain for 20 minutes Incubate in a 37 deg moisture chamber for 1 hour, then dry Spray with iodine and look for a lack of color change to deep blue-black
Phadebas Method – Presumptive Tablets consist of insoluble starch polymers to which a blue dye has been covalently bound Add putative saliva stain to water Add tablet When amylase is present: Polymers are degraded Dye is liberated and becomes soluble Concentration of soluble dye is measured by spectrophotometry at 620 nm
Direct, Less Presumptive Test Lateral Flow Immunochromatographic Strip Test or Rapid Stain Identification (RSID) Saliva kits Detects for the a-amylase molecule itself, specifically the one in human saliva Can test various surfaces such as those on paper, cigarette butts, plastic or glass bottles, metal cans, etc. Tricky….. Why?
Feces / Urine Not as common Swabbed, bagged, placed in vials to be air-tight and prevent cross-contamination
Factors that Effect Urine Amount produced – liquid intake, temperature, physical activity What effects different components found in urine? Health and diet
What’s in Urine Urochrome pigment (what makes the yellow color) Crystalline substances Epithelial cells from the urinary tract lining
Urea Second largest constituent of urine & the product of the breakdown of protein Body puts of ~30g a day Crystals form when combined with xanthydrol and acetic acid Urea will also turn pink/red in the presence of p-dimethylaminocinnamaldehyde (DMAC)
Can you find DNA in urine? Sometimes….. But it’s poor There’s no DNA in actual urine However, since it is stored in the bladder and goes through the urethra, you can sometimes get the lining epithelial cells Better with a liquid sample properly stored Who has more DNA-containing cellular material in their urine – male or female?
Urine Test Finding it – color, smell, chemical mapping Presumptive Smell? Ammonia (from the break down of urea) Methods? Microcrystalline tests, color tests, TLC (thin layer chromatography), GC/MS, radial gel diffusion, immunoassays
Presumptive Assay Prepare Whatman filter paper circle with one drop of bromothymol blue, a pH indicator dye Yellow-green at pH 6 Aqua blue at pH greater than 7.6 Allow bromothymol blue to dry Add drop of extract from evidence sample on top of dye, then add drop of urease If urea present, urease will degrade to ammonia Ammonia will raise pH and dye will turn aqua blue
Immunological Assay RSID-urine Tests Tamm Horsefall glycoprotein (abundant in urine) Not specific for human urine
Feces Brown color due to bilirubin Smell? Break down of amino acids into skatole, indole, and methyl-mercaptan by bacteria Made of dead bacteria (that aids in digestion), living bacteria, protein, undigested food residue (fiber), waste material from food, cellular linings, fat, salts, mucus from intestines and the liver
Feces Detection – Confirmation Assay Compound microscope (extract it in water, stain using KPIC, and mount on a slide) Look for animal and plant cells (digestion)
Presumptive Assay Prepare extract of feces stain Oxidize urobilinogen (a breakdown compound from bilirubin) to urobilin Add zinc chloride If urobilin present, extract will fluoresce under UV light Glows green! Used in cases of “gassing” in prisons