Ribosomal DNA as target for the assessment of DNA degradation of human and canine DNA
Autor: | Maria Del Mar Boronat, Sarah Aurora Heß, Salvatore Trapani, Richard Jäger, Burkhard Rolf, Glenn M.G. Theunissen |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Forensic Genetics
integumentary system Biology Amplicon Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction Molecular biology DNA Fingerprinting DNA Ribosomal DNA sequencing Pathology and Forensic Medicine Nuclear DNA Issues ethics and legal aspects chemistry.chemical_compound DNA degradation Real-time polymerase chain reaction Dogs chemistry Animals Humans Animal species Ribosomal DNA DNA Hair Microsatellite Repeats |
Zdroj: | Legal medicine (Tokyo, Japan). 48 |
ISSN: | 1873-4162 |
Popis: | The assessment of DNA amount and DNA integrity can support forensic DNA analysis, in particular of problematic traces such as single telogen hairs where STR typing success is often hampered by low amounts and strong degradation of nuclear DNA. Common strategies consist of quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR)-based analysis of the abundance of a short versus a long nuclear amplicon, the latter prone to DNA degradation. To increase sensitivity, commercial qPCR solutions rest on amplification of multi-copy DNA sequences. Here we show that ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences are well suited for the same purpose. Because rDNA sequences are present in high copy number in most eukaryotic species, qPCR strategies can easily be adapted to non-human species. In this paper, we establish qPCR-based assays for human or dog DNA, respectively, which allow for sensitive analysis of DNA amounts and DNA degradation. We show that the human system can be applied to DNA of single telogen hairs, where STR typing success correlates with measured amounts and integrity of the DNA. By adapting the system to dog rDNA sequences we found that single telogen dog hairs often displayed less DNA degradation than human telogen hairs, in most cases allowing for successful STR typing. Thus, qPCR-based analysis of rDNA represents a cost-effective, highly sensitive strategy to assess DNA amount and integrity that can be adapted to hairs or other traces from various animal species. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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