RNA/DNA co-analysis from blood stains--results of a second collaborative EDNAP exercise.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_A9D3CA5E9E49
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
RNA/DNA co-analysis from blood stains--results of a second collaborative EDNAP exercise.
Journal
Forensic Science International. Genetics
Author(s)
Haas C., Hanson E., Anjos M.J., Bär W., Banemann R., Berti A., Borges E., Bouakaze C., Carracedo A., Carvalho M., Castella V., Choma A., De Cock G., Dötsch M., Hoff-Olsen P., Johansen P., Kohlmeier F., Lindenbergh P.A., Ludes B., Maroñas O., Moore D., Morerod M.L., Morling N., Niederstätter H., Noel F., Parson W., Patel G., Popielarz C., Salata E., Schneider P.M., Sijen T., Svie?ena B. , Turanská M., Zatkalíková L., Ballantyne J.
ISSN
1878-0326 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1872-4973
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2012
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
6
Number
1
Pages
70-80
Language
english
Abstract
A second collaborative exercise on RNA/DNA co-analysis for body fluid identification and STR profiling was organized by the European DNA Profiling Group (EDNAP). Six human blood stains, two blood dilution series (5-0.001 μl blood) and, optionally, bona fide or mock casework samples of human or non-human origin were analyzed by the participating laboratories using a RNA/DNA co-extraction or solely RNA extraction method. Two novel mRNA multiplexes were used for the identification of blood: a highly sensitive duplex (HBA, HBB) and a moderately sensitive pentaplex (ALAS2, CD3G, ANK1, SPTB and PBGD). The laboratories used different chemistries and instrumentation. All of the 18 participating laboratories were able to successfully isolate and detect mRNA in dried blood stains. Thirteen laboratories simultaneously extracted RNA and DNA from individual stains and were able to utilize mRNA profiling to confirm the presence of blood and to obtain autosomal STR profiles from the blood stain donors. The positive identification of blood and good quality DNA profiles were also obtained from old and compromised casework samples. The method proved to be reproducible and sensitive using different analysis strategies. The results of this collaborative exercise involving a RNA/DNA co-extraction strategy support the potential use of an mRNA based system for the identification of blood in forensic casework that is compatible with current DNA analysis methodology.
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
09/02/2012 11:32
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:14
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