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Massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon STRs: Concordance with minisatellite DNA profiles from historical wildlife crime

Birds of prey have suffered persecution for centuries through trapping, shooting, poisoning and theft from the wild to meet the demand from egg collectors and falconers; they were also amongst the earliest beneficiaries of DNA testing in wildlife forensics. Here we report the identification and char...

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Autores principales: Beasley, Jordan, Shorrock, Guy, Neumann, Rita, May, Celia A., Wetton, Jon H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8430417/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34174583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsigen.2021.102550
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author Beasley, Jordan
Shorrock, Guy
Neumann, Rita
May, Celia A.
Wetton, Jon H.
author_facet Beasley, Jordan
Shorrock, Guy
Neumann, Rita
May, Celia A.
Wetton, Jon H.
author_sort Beasley, Jordan
collection PubMed
description Birds of prey have suffered persecution for centuries through trapping, shooting, poisoning and theft from the wild to meet the demand from egg collectors and falconers; they were also amongst the earliest beneficiaries of DNA testing in wildlife forensics. Here we report the identification and characterisation of 14 novel tetramer, pentamer and hexamer short tandem repeat (STR) markers which can be typed either by capillary electrophoresis or massively parallel sequencing (MPS) and apply them to historical casework samples involving 49 peregrine falcons, 30 of which were claimed to be the captively bred offspring of nine pairs. The birds were initially tested in 1994 with a multilocus DNA fingerprinting probe, a sex test and eight single-locus minisatellite probes (SLPs) demonstrating that 23 birds were unrelated to the claimed parents. The multilocus and SLP approaches were highly discriminating but extremely time consuming and required microgram quantities of high molecular weight DNA and the use of radioisotopes. The STR markers displayed between 2 and 21 alleles per locus (mean = 7.6), lengths between 140 and 360 bp, and heterozygosities from 0.4 to 0.93. They produced wholly concordant conclusions with similar discrimination power but in a fraction of the time using a hundred-fold less DNA and with standard forensic equipment. Furthermore, eleven of these STRs were amplified in a single reaction and typed using MPS on the Illumina MiSeq platform revealing eight additional alleles (three with variant repeat structures and five solely due to flanking SNPs) across four loci. This approach gave a random match probability of < 1E-9, and a parental pair false inclusion probability of < 1E-5, with a further ten-fold reduction in the amount of DNA required (~3 ng) and the potential to analyse mixed samples. These STRs will be of value in monitoring wild populations of these key indicator species as well as for testing captive breeding claims and establishing a database of captive raptors. They have the potential to resolve complex cases involving trace, mixed and degraded samples from raptor persecution casework representing a significant advance over the previously applied methods.
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spelling pubmed-84304172021-09-14 Massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon STRs: Concordance with minisatellite DNA profiles from historical wildlife crime Beasley, Jordan Shorrock, Guy Neumann, Rita May, Celia A. Wetton, Jon H. Forensic Sci Int Genet Research Paper Birds of prey have suffered persecution for centuries through trapping, shooting, poisoning and theft from the wild to meet the demand from egg collectors and falconers; they were also amongst the earliest beneficiaries of DNA testing in wildlife forensics. Here we report the identification and characterisation of 14 novel tetramer, pentamer and hexamer short tandem repeat (STR) markers which can be typed either by capillary electrophoresis or massively parallel sequencing (MPS) and apply them to historical casework samples involving 49 peregrine falcons, 30 of which were claimed to be the captively bred offspring of nine pairs. The birds were initially tested in 1994 with a multilocus DNA fingerprinting probe, a sex test and eight single-locus minisatellite probes (SLPs) demonstrating that 23 birds were unrelated to the claimed parents. The multilocus and SLP approaches were highly discriminating but extremely time consuming and required microgram quantities of high molecular weight DNA and the use of radioisotopes. The STR markers displayed between 2 and 21 alleles per locus (mean = 7.6), lengths between 140 and 360 bp, and heterozygosities from 0.4 to 0.93. They produced wholly concordant conclusions with similar discrimination power but in a fraction of the time using a hundred-fold less DNA and with standard forensic equipment. Furthermore, eleven of these STRs were amplified in a single reaction and typed using MPS on the Illumina MiSeq platform revealing eight additional alleles (three with variant repeat structures and five solely due to flanking SNPs) across four loci. This approach gave a random match probability of < 1E-9, and a parental pair false inclusion probability of < 1E-5, with a further ten-fold reduction in the amount of DNA required (~3 ng) and the potential to analyse mixed samples. These STRs will be of value in monitoring wild populations of these key indicator species as well as for testing captive breeding claims and establishing a database of captive raptors. They have the potential to resolve complex cases involving trace, mixed and degraded samples from raptor persecution casework representing a significant advance over the previously applied methods. Elsevier 2021-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8430417/ /pubmed/34174583 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsigen.2021.102550 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Beasley, Jordan
Shorrock, Guy
Neumann, Rita
May, Celia A.
Wetton, Jon H.
Massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon STRs: Concordance with minisatellite DNA profiles from historical wildlife crime
title Massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon STRs: Concordance with minisatellite DNA profiles from historical wildlife crime
title_full Massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon STRs: Concordance with minisatellite DNA profiles from historical wildlife crime
title_fullStr Massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon STRs: Concordance with minisatellite DNA profiles from historical wildlife crime
title_full_unstemmed Massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon STRs: Concordance with minisatellite DNA profiles from historical wildlife crime
title_short Massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon STRs: Concordance with minisatellite DNA profiles from historical wildlife crime
title_sort massively parallel sequencing and capillary electrophoresis of a novel panel of falcon strs: concordance with minisatellite dna profiles from historical wildlife crime
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8430417/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34174583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsigen.2021.102550
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