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      Probabilistic genotyping of single cell replicates from complex DNA mixtures recovers higher contributor LRs than standard analysis.

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          Abstract

          DNA mixtures are a common source of crime scene evidence and are often one of the more difficult sources of biological evidence to interpret. With the implementation of probabilistic genotyping (PG), mixture analysis has been revolutionized allowing previously unresolvable mixed profiles to be analyzed and probative genotype information from contributors to be recovered. However, due to allele overlap, artifacts, or low-level minor contributors, genotype information loss inevitably occurs. In order to reduce the potential loss of significant DNA information from donors in complex mixtures, an alternative approach is to physically separate individual cells from mixtures prior to performing DNA typing thus obtaining single source profiles from contributors. In the present work, a simplified micro-manipulation technique combined with enhanced single-cell DNA typing was used to collect one or few cells, referred to as direct single-cell subsampling (DSCS). Using this approach, single and 2-cell subsamples were collected from 2 to 6 person mixtures. Single-cell subsamples resulted in single source DNA profiles while the 2-cell subsamples returned either single source DNA profiles or new mini-mixtures that are less complex than the original mixture due to the presence of fewer contributors. PG (STRmix™) was implemented, after appropriate validation, to analyze the original bulk mixtures, single source cell subsamples, and the 2-cell mini mixture subsamples from the original 2-6-person mixtures. PG further allowed replicate analysis to be employed which, in many instances, resulted in a significant gain of genotype information such that the returned donor likelihood ratios (LRs) were comparable to that seen in their single source reference profiles (i.e., the reciprocal of their random match probabilities). In every mixture, the DSCS approach gave improved results for each donor compared to standard bulk mixture analysis. With the 5- and 6- person complex mixtures, DSCS recovered highly probative LRs (≥1020) from donors that had returned non-probative LRs (<103) by standard methods.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Sci Justice
          Science & justice : journal of the Forensic Science Society
          Elsevier BV
          1876-4452
          1355-0306
          Mar 2022
          : 62
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Graduate Program in Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of Central Florida, PO Box 162366, Orlando, FL 32816-2366, USA.
          [2 ] Graduate Program in Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of Central Florida, PO Box 162366, Orlando, FL 32816-2366, USA; National Center for Forensic Science, PO Box 162367, Orlando, FL 32816-2367, USA; Department of Chemistry, University of Central Florida, PO Box 162366, Orlando, FL 32816-2366, USA.
          [3 ] Graduate Program in Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of Central Florida, PO Box 162366, Orlando, FL 32816-2366, USA; National Center for Forensic Science, PO Box 162367, Orlando, FL 32816-2367, USA; Department of Chemistry, University of Central Florida, PO Box 162366, Orlando, FL 32816-2366, USA. Electronic address: Jack.Ballantyne@ucf.edu.
          Article
          S1355-0306(22)00015-6
          10.1016/j.scijus.2022.01.003
          35277229
          bd9b2264-674a-4e43-b6ed-c5014d7c84d5
          History

          Cell isolation and recovery,Probabilistic genotyping,Micro-manipulation,Forensic genetics,Complex DNA mixture de-convolution,Single-cell analysis

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