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Household dust harbors forensic DNA info

A feather duster has white dust coming off of it.

Itโ€™s possible to retrieve forensically relevant information from human DNA in household dust, a new study finds.

After sampling indoor dust from 13 households, researchers were able to detect DNA from household residents over 90% of the time, and DNA from non-occupants 50% of the time. The work could be a way to help investigators find leads in difficult cases.

Specifically, the researchers were able to obtain single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs, from the dust samples. SNPs are sites within the genome that vary between individualsโ€”corresponding to characteristics like eye colorโ€”that can give investigators a โ€œsnapshotโ€ of the person.

โ€œSNPs are just single sites in the genome that can provide forensically useful information on identity, ancestry, and physical characteristicsโ€”itโ€™s the same information used by places like Ancestry.comโ€”that can be done with tests that are widely available,โ€ says Kelly Meiklejohn, assistant professor of forensic science and coordinator of the forensic sciences cluster at North Carolina State University and corresponding author of the study in the Journal of Forensic Sciences.

โ€œBecause theyโ€™re single sites, theyโ€™re easier to recover for highly degraded samples where we may only be able to amplify short regions of the DNA,โ€ Meiklejohn says.

โ€œTraditional DNA analysis in forensics amplifies regions ranging from 100 to 500 base pairs, so for a highly degraded sample the large regions often drop out. SNPs as a whole donโ€™t provide the same level of discrimination as traditional forensic DNA testing, but they could be a starting place in cases without leads.โ€

Meiklejohn and her team recruited 13 diverse households and took cheek swabs from each occupant along with dust samples from five areas within each home: the top of the refrigerator, inside the bedroom closet, the top frame of the front door, a bookshelf or photo frame in the living room, and a windowsill in the living room.

Utilizing massively parallel sequencing, or MPS, the team was able to quickly sequence multiple samples and target the SNPs of interest. They found that 93% of known household occupants were detected in at least one dust sample from each household. They also saw DNA from non-occupants in over half of the samples collected from each site.

โ€œThis data wouldnโ€™t be used like traditional forensic DNA evidenceโ€”to link a single individual to a crimeโ€”but it could be useful for establishing clues about the ancestry and physical characteristics of individuals at a scene and possibly give investigators leads in cases where there may not be much to go on,โ€ Meiklejohn says.

โ€œBut while we know it is possible to detect occupants versus non-occupants, we donโ€™t know how long an individual has to stay in a household before they leave DNA traces in household dust.โ€

The researchers plan to address the question of how much time it takes for non-occupants to be detected in dust in future studies. Meiklejohn sees the work as being useful in numerous potential investigative scenarios.

โ€œWhen perpetrators clean crime scenes, dust isnโ€™t something they usually think of,โ€ Meiklejohn says. โ€œThis study is our first step into this realm. We could see this being applied to scenarios such as trying to confirm individuals who might have been in a space but left no trace blood, saliva, or hair. Also for cases with no leads, no hit on the national DNA database, could household dust provide leads?โ€

The NC State College of Veterinary Medicine funded the work. Additional coauthors are from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and NC State.

Source: NC State

The post Household dust harbors forensic DNA info appeared first on Futurity.

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