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Published byKenneth Wilson Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 20.1-20.2.1: DQA1/PM Chapter 18: Autosomal STR Profiling
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Based on SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) Variations in the human genome Single-base pair change originating from spontaneous mutations Majority of human DNA polymorphisms 1.4 million identified Most are bi-allelic (e.g. AGT and ATT are common alleles but ACT and AAT are not) 2
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Advantages: SNPs are abundant and can be used as markers Can easily be amplified by PCR ▪ 50-100 bp in length No “binning” or statistical problems Useful for phenotyping Disadvantages: Not very polymorphic (most are only dimorphic) ▪ Much lower level of discrimination than DNA Fingerprinting or STR analysis 3
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Very important during late 1980’s and 1990’s in forensic labs (before discovery of STRs) PCR-based: Allowed for analysis of trace evidence and degraded samples Loci: HLA-DQA1 (Average Pm = 1/20) Polymarker (Average Pm = 1/164) Combined average Pm = 1/3,300 4
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Methods to detect SNPs: DNA sequencing (labor-intensive) Allele-specific oligonucleotide (ASO) hybridization assays (fast and easy) ▪ ASO probes hybridize to their complementary DNA sequences to distinguish known polymorphic alleles ▪ Steps: ▪ DNA extraction ▪ PCR amplification across the SNP site using biotinylated primers ▪ Denaturation of DNA hybridization to immobilized probes ▪ Colorimetric detection 5
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Like VNTRs, are tandem repeats Length of repeat motif is less than 10 bp Also known as “microsatellites” Block is usually less than 500 bp Advantages: Lots of them (more than 100,000 in human genome) Very polymorphic Block is small enough for PCR amplification ▪ Good for trace evidence and degraded DNA ▪ Amplicons can be separated on high resolution polyacrylamide gels 11
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Repeat Unit Length Dimeric (CT), Trimeric (CAT), Tetrameric (CTTG)... High degree of polymorphism ▪ Mutation “hot spots” ▪ Located in intergenic DNA Micorvariants (e.g. 15.2) Population Match Probability Best STR systems: ▪ Highly polymorphic STRs ▪ Relatively equal frequency distribution at all loci ▪ Unlinked 14
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STR multiplex system in U.K.- 4 loci 1995- first national database established in U.K. 6 STR loci + amelogenin (4 loci added later) 1997- first database in U.S. CODIS FBI 13 core loci + amelogenin 2 more now added for a total of 15 15
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Loci are amplified using fluorescent dye-labeled primers Separated using polyacrylamide electrophoresis Detection: Wavelength of fluorescence Time to window Amplitude of signal Results in an electropherogram Size of each amplicon determined by comparison to internal size standard (ROX, LIZ) 16
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17 Relative fluorescent units (rfu’s) Time since injection = amplicon length
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Mutations at STR core repeat regions During embryogenesis During spermatogenesis Duplications Primer binding site mutations Amplification artifacts Allelic drop out, allelic drop in, stutter Electrophoretic artifacts Pull-up, dye blobs, and spikes 18
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Degraded DNA MiniSTR multiplex kits Low-copy Number DNA (LCN) < 100 pg of DNA Mixtures Sexual assault cases Mixture interpretation 19
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SWGDAM & DNA Commission of the ISFG: Inclusion (Match) ▪ Calculate Pm ▪ Sometimes challenged in Court (especially mixtures) Exclusion ▪ No calculation needed ▪ Sometimes challenged in Court (especially mixtures) Inconclusive ▪ Multiple interpretations may be possible ▪ Often challenged in Court 20
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