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Published byHilary Allison Harvey Modified over 8 years ago
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Bio II: Forensics
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DNA molecules are found in the nucleus of cells in the human body in chromosomes. People have 23 pairs of chromosomes, with an allele for each trait on each chromosome. So, 2 alleles for each trait Junk DNA is the non-coding portion of DNA that contains different DNA sequences in different people. Most of the DNA in members of the same species is identical.
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Within junk DNA, sequences are repeated multiple times, and the number of times varies among individuals (called VNTR’s) Some are 9-80 bases in length Some are only 2-5 bases in length and are becoming the preferred sequences for analysis. (called STR’s)
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In a human population, these differences among the junk DNA of individuals are called polymorphisms. DNA Fingerprinting is a technique that was developed for isolating and analyzing these variable areas. Developed in 1984 appears as a pattern of bands on X-ray film.
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VNTR and STR data are analyzed for (a) tissue matching and (b) inheritance matching. Population genetics is the study of variation in genes among groups of individuals. Probability calculations are used to determine the chance of a random person would having the same allele as (a) a suspect in a crime or (b) an alleged father in a paternity case.
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A perpetrator may leave biological evidence, such as saliva, blood, hair, skin, or semen at a crime scene. is individual evidence may be trace evidence In 1993 the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique was invented. It generates multiple copies of DNA evidence when there is only a small amount available.
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1. Use disposable gloves and collection instruments. 2. Avoid physical contact, talking, sneezing, and coughing in the evidence area. 3. Air-dry evidence and put it into new paper bags or envelopes. 4. If evidence cannot be dried, freeze it. 5. Keep evidence cool and dry during transportation and storage.
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1. Cells are isolated from biological evidence 2. The cells then are disrupted (lysed) to release the DNA from proteins and other cell components. Once released, the cell parts are “spun down” in a centrifuge and DNA can be precipitated from the solution
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Amplification: PCR may be needed to make more copies of the DNA for testing if the sample was small
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To verify that the DNA in the bands is not the same, DNA probes are used to identify the unique sequences in a person’s DNA. The probe binds to complimentary bases in the DNA bands. In most criminal cases, 6-8 probes are used.
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Band position, width, and probe binding are significant in matching samples of DNA. DNA fingerprinting can (a) match crime scene DNA with a suspect, (b) determine maternity, paternity, or match to another relative, (c) eliminate a suspect, (d) free a falsely imprisoned individual, and (e) identify human remains.
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Child shares this allele with mother Child shares this allele with father
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Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for DNA amplification has largely eliminated the problem resulting from the tiny samples usually available. DNA evidence must be collected carefully to avoid contamination with other DNA. DNA analysis involves extraction, electrophoresis, and visualization. DNA profiles are kept by police agencies in electronic databases.
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