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Isolating DNA from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach

BACKGROUND: Profiling sperm DNA present on vaginal swabs taken from rape victims often contributes to identifying and incarcerating rapists. Large amounts of the victim’s epithelial cells contaminate the sperm present on swabs, however, and complicate this process. The standard method for obtaining...

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Autores principales: Garvin, Alex M, Fischer, Andrea, Schnee-Griese, Jutta, Jelinski, Andrea, Bottinelli, Michel, Soldati, Gianni, Tubio, Monica, Castella, Vincent, Monney, Nathalie, Malik, Naseem, Madrid, Michelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3546913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23211019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2041-2223-3-25
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author Garvin, Alex M
Fischer, Andrea
Schnee-Griese, Jutta
Jelinski, Andrea
Bottinelli, Michel
Soldati, Gianni
Tubio, Monica
Castella, Vincent
Monney, Nathalie
Malik, Naseem
Madrid, Michelle
author_facet Garvin, Alex M
Fischer, Andrea
Schnee-Griese, Jutta
Jelinski, Andrea
Bottinelli, Michel
Soldati, Gianni
Tubio, Monica
Castella, Vincent
Monney, Nathalie
Malik, Naseem
Madrid, Michelle
author_sort Garvin, Alex M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Profiling sperm DNA present on vaginal swabs taken from rape victims often contributes to identifying and incarcerating rapists. Large amounts of the victim’s epithelial cells contaminate the sperm present on swabs, however, and complicate this process. The standard method for obtaining relatively pure sperm DNA from a vaginal swab is to digest the epithelial cells with Proteinase K in order to solubilize the victim’s DNA, and to then physically separate the soluble DNA from the intact sperm by pelleting the sperm, removing the victim’s fraction, and repeatedly washing the sperm pellet. An alternative approach that does not require washing steps is to digest with Proteinase K, pellet the sperm, remove the victim’s fraction, and then digest the residual victim’s DNA with a nuclease. METHODS: The nuclease approach has been commercialized in a product, the Erase Sperm Isolation Kit (PTC Labs, Columbia, MO, USA), and five crime laboratories have tested it on semen-spiked female buccal swabs in a direct comparison with their standard methods. Comparisons have also been performed on timed post-coital vaginal swabs and evidence collected from sexual assault cases. RESULTS: For the semen-spiked buccal swabs, Erase outperformed the standard methods in all five laboratories and in most cases was able to provide a clean male profile from buccal swabs spiked with only 1,500 sperm. The vaginal swabs taken after consensual sex and the evidence collected from rape victims showed a similar pattern of Erase providing superior profiles. CONCLUSIONS: In all samples tested, STR profiles of the male DNA fractions obtained with Erase were as good as or better than those obtained using the standard methods.
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spelling pubmed-35469132013-01-17 Isolating DNA from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach Garvin, Alex M Fischer, Andrea Schnee-Griese, Jutta Jelinski, Andrea Bottinelli, Michel Soldati, Gianni Tubio, Monica Castella, Vincent Monney, Nathalie Malik, Naseem Madrid, Michelle Investig Genet Research BACKGROUND: Profiling sperm DNA present on vaginal swabs taken from rape victims often contributes to identifying and incarcerating rapists. Large amounts of the victim’s epithelial cells contaminate the sperm present on swabs, however, and complicate this process. The standard method for obtaining relatively pure sperm DNA from a vaginal swab is to digest the epithelial cells with Proteinase K in order to solubilize the victim’s DNA, and to then physically separate the soluble DNA from the intact sperm by pelleting the sperm, removing the victim’s fraction, and repeatedly washing the sperm pellet. An alternative approach that does not require washing steps is to digest with Proteinase K, pellet the sperm, remove the victim’s fraction, and then digest the residual victim’s DNA with a nuclease. METHODS: The nuclease approach has been commercialized in a product, the Erase Sperm Isolation Kit (PTC Labs, Columbia, MO, USA), and five crime laboratories have tested it on semen-spiked female buccal swabs in a direct comparison with their standard methods. Comparisons have also been performed on timed post-coital vaginal swabs and evidence collected from sexual assault cases. RESULTS: For the semen-spiked buccal swabs, Erase outperformed the standard methods in all five laboratories and in most cases was able to provide a clean male profile from buccal swabs spiked with only 1,500 sperm. The vaginal swabs taken after consensual sex and the evidence collected from rape victims showed a similar pattern of Erase providing superior profiles. CONCLUSIONS: In all samples tested, STR profiles of the male DNA fractions obtained with Erase were as good as or better than those obtained using the standard methods. BioMed Central 2012-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3546913/ /pubmed/23211019 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2041-2223-3-25 Text en Copyright ©2012 Garvin et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Garvin, Alex M
Fischer, Andrea
Schnee-Griese, Jutta
Jelinski, Andrea
Bottinelli, Michel
Soldati, Gianni
Tubio, Monica
Castella, Vincent
Monney, Nathalie
Malik, Naseem
Madrid, Michelle
Isolating DNA from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach
title Isolating DNA from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach
title_full Isolating DNA from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach
title_fullStr Isolating DNA from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach
title_full_unstemmed Isolating DNA from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach
title_short Isolating DNA from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach
title_sort isolating dna from sexual assault cases: a comparison of standard methods with a nuclease-based approach
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3546913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23211019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2041-2223-3-25
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