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Forensic DNA
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The Cell The smallest unit of life
The nucleus is the “brain” of the cell contains all the genetic info the cell needs to exist & to reproduce In most types of cells, genetic information is organized into structures called chromosomes
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Chromosomes In most types of cells, genetic information is organized into structures called chromosomes usually X shaped Y chromosome in males 23 pairs in humans one from mother & one from father
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Chromosomes 22 of the pairs of chromosomes are called autosomes, and they all look the same (like and ‘x’). The other pair are your sex chromosomes, and they differ between males (XY) and females (XX).
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Genes Each chromosome contains hundreds to thousands information blocks called genes Each gene is the blueprint for a specific type of protein in the body only identical twins will have all the genes identical
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Chromosomes Each chromosome is a single polymeric molecule called DNA
if fully extended the molecule would be about 1.7 meters long unwrapping all the DNA in all your cells cover the distance from earth to moon 6,000 times
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Phenotypes When the sperm fertilizes the egg, you get half of your chromosomes from each parent. You get your characteristics (phenotype) based on the DNA that are contained in these chromosomes.
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How does it work? Your DNA is arranged into many segments called genes. These genes are usually composed of at least two alleles from your mom and dad. Sometimes, one gene will dominate over the other: we call this complete dominance. Ex. Tongue rolling has a dominant phenotype. TT vs. Tt vs. tt
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Sometimes, the genes mix together and co-exist
Sometimes, the genes mix together and co-exist. We call this co-dominance. Ex. AB blood type Neither A nor B dominate over one another; rather, they coexist. We use something called the Punnett square to predict the outcome of a genetic cross (offspring genotypes and phenotypes)
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Structure of DNA
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Nucleotides DNA is a polymer built from monomers called nucleotides
Each nucleotide is consists of deoxyribose pentose sugar phosphoric acid a nitrogenous base
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The phosphate The sugar
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Nitrogenous Bases The Purines Adenine (A) Guanine (G)
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Nitrogenous Bases The Pyrimidines Cytosine (C) Thymine (T)
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The DNA Backbone The monomers are linked together by phosphodiester bridges (bonds) links the 3’ carbon in the ribose of one nucleotide to the 5’ carbon in the ribose of the adjacent nucleotide
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The DNA Double Helix DNA is normally a double stranded macromolecule
Two polynucleotide chains are held together by H-bonding A always pairs with T C always pairs with G
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5’ T-T-G-A-C-T-A-T-C-C-A-G-A-T-C 3’
In a double helix the strands go in opposite directions
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Functions of DNA Two Functions
To transmit information from one generation of cells to the next To provide the information for the synthesis of components (proteins) necessary for cellular function
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DNA Fingerprinting The basic structure of everyone’s DNA is the same
the difference between people is the ordering of the base pairs Every person can be distinguished by the sequence of their base pairs millions of base pairs make this impractical a shorter method uses repeating patterns that are present in DNA
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DNA composition DNA strands contain information which directs an organism’s development Exons, also called encoded DNA <1.5% of DNA is encoded
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DNA also contains stretches of DNA that appear to provide no relevant genetic information
Introns or un-coded DNA 98.5% of DNA is “junk” DNA Also includes Variable Number of Tandem Repeats (VNTRs) Can contain anywhere from 20 to 200 base pairs
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VNTRs All humans have some VNTRs
VNTRs come from the genetic information donated by parents can have VNTRs from mother, father or a combination will not have a VNTR that is from neither parent
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D1 = biological daughter of both parents
D2 = child of mother & former husband S1 = couple’s biological son S2 = adopted son
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Purpose of DNA Fingerprinting
Determine identity (match tissue samples) Establish paternity
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DNA as Forensic Evidence
Individual evidence: used to identify a single person Trace evidence: small amount left at a crime scene Found in saliva, blood, semen, skin, hair roots, urine (nuclear DNA) Hair, bones, teeth (mtDNA)
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mtDNA Mitochondrial DNA Inherited ONLY from the mother
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Collection of DNA Avoid contamination while collecting DNA samples
Wear gloves; avoid sneezing or coughing Preserve carefully Air-dry samples If wet, store in freezer
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DNA Profiling Examine an individual’s DNA sequence to develop a DNA fingerprint (this is different than a regular fingerprint!)
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Steps of DNA Fingerprinting
1. Extraction: take DNA out of cells 2. Amplification: make copies of DNA Use PCR (polymerase chain reaction)3. 3. Electrophoresis: DNA pieces separated within an agarose gel or capillary tube Visible bands of DNA form a unique pattern Pattern = “fingerprint”
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VNTR Analysis Usually an individual will inherit a different variant of the repeated sequence from each parent
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VNTR Analysis PCR primers bracket the locus
PCR reaction forms a nucleotide chain from the template
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VNTR Analysis The length of the amplified DNA & its position after electrophoresis will depend on the number or repeated bases in the sequence
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Analysis used 3 different VNTR loci for each suspect giving
6 bands
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Although some individuals have several bands in common,
the overall pattern is distinctive for each
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Suspects A & C can be eliminated
B remains a suspect
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