DNA FINGERPRINTING AND FORENSIC - · PDF file6/12/2014 · golongan darah. Akan...

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Transcript of DNA FINGERPRINTING AND FORENSIC - · PDF file6/12/2014 · golongan darah. Akan...

INTRODUCTION OF BIOTECHNOLOGY

DNA FINGERPRINTING

AND FORENSIC

2014

ENDRIKA WIDYASTUTI

INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE ?

Mr. Chan ingin pergi ke Hongkong untuk tinggal bersama anaknya. Sebelum pergi ke Hongkong, Mr. Chan harus menunjukkan dokumen tes laboratorium pada Pihak Imigrasi bahwa Mr. Chan memiliki hubungan kekerabatan dengan anaknya.

Akhirnya Mr. Chan menjalankan tes golongan darah. Akan tetapi golongan darahnya tidak sama dengan anaknya, sehingga berkas pengurusan visa Mr. Chan ditunda oleh pihak imigrasi. Mr. Chan memberitahu pihak imigrasi bahwa hubungan kekerabatan tidak hanya dibuktikan melalui golongan darah saja.

• Mengapa Golongan Darah tidak selalu mencerminkan ada/tidaknya hubungan kekerabatan?

• Apakah ada tes lain yang dapat digunakan untuk membuktikan hubungan kekerabatan antara Mr. Chan dan Anaknya?

4

Blood group typing is much less

sensitive.

May use DNA fingerprint to provide

biological evidence as a proof in a

paternity test.

IDENTIFICATION:CLASSIC AND DNA

MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

• only by MATCHING the parameters

• specific feature possesed by the individual

• height, weight and general physique

• hair color and length, moustache, skin pigmentation, eye color

• clothing, jewellery, ornaments

• facial appearance, age

IDENTITY FROM TEETH

• identification of the dead, bite marks, estimation of age

• commonly comparison of antemortem dental chartings with the direct examination of the teeth

• mass disasters

• no previous records –age, sex and ethnic origin

THE INDIVIDUALITY OF CELLS

• blood grups and Rh factor – possibility to exclude 93% of non-matching samples

• replaced with DNA analysis of human tissue and fluid

TATOOS AND BODY PIERCING

• there has to be comparison

• photographs and drawings if visual identification is not possible

• risk of contamination

• blood, hair with roots;

samples of spleen;

buccal smears; vaginal, anal and penile swabs

• paternity/maternity testing

• every bar in the “bar code” must have come from either the father or mother, half from each

IDENTITY OF DECOMPOSED OR SKELETALIZED REMAINS

• are the remains actually bones?

• are the remains human?

• one or more bodies?

• what sex are the bones? – pelvis and skull

• age, height, race?

• can a personal identity be discovered?

• YouTube - Crime 360: Human Bone Identification

FACIAL RECONSTRUCTION FROM SKULLS

• measuring the average soft-tissue thickness at many points on the skull and rebuilding this layer with plasticine on unknown skull

• computerized reconstruction

• individuality of faces?

• what about eyes and lips?

ACTIVITY 8.1

a) There are 46 pairs of chromosomes in each nucleus of a human cell.Chromosomes are made of DNA and proteins.

b) DNA determines the body characteristics of an organism.

c) DNA may be extracted from red blood cells found in a blood sample.

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1.Decide whether the following statements are TRUE or FALSE.

FALSE

TRUE

TRUE

ACTIVITY 8.1

e) The Hair and Teeth of the same person are composed of same DNA molecules.

f) Identical twins have different base sequences of DNA .

g) In the DNA structure, adenine (A) will only link with cytosine (C) and guanine (G) will only link with thymine (T).

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TRUE

FALSE

FALSE

Define DNA FINGERPRINTING

Preparation of DNA FINGERPRINTING

Putting DNA to the TEST

Familial Relationships and DNA PROFILE

CASE STUDY

KEY CONCEPT

DNA fingerprints identify people at the molecular

level.

Define DNA FINGERPRINTING

Chemical structure of

DNA always same, but

the order of basepairs

are differs

DNA fingerprints are

based on parts of an

individual’s DNA that

can by used for

identification.

DNA fingerprinting is used for identification.

• DNA fingerprinting depends on the probability of a

match.

– Many people have the

same number of

repeats in a certain

region of DNA.

– The probability that two

people share identical

numbers of repeats in

several locations is

very small.

(mother) (child 1) (child 2) (father)

– Individual probabilities are multiplied to find the

overall probability of two DNA fingerprints randomly

matching.

– Several regions of DNA are

used to make DNA fingerprints.

1 1 1 1

500 90 120 5,400,0001 chance in 5.4 million peoplex x = =

• DNA fingerprinting is used in several ways.

– evidence in criminal

cases

– paternity tests

– immigration requests

– studying biodiversity

Define DNA FINGERPRINTING

Preparation of DNA FINGERPRINTING

Putting DNA to the TEST

Familial Relationships and DNA PROFILE

CASE STUDY

PROCEDURE

• Collected DNA

• DNA isolation

• DNA Analysis

DNA COLLECTION & COMPARISON

• DNA samples can be from:Saliva

blood

hair strands

skin

finger or toe nails,

tooth with root material

DNA COLLECTION & COMPARISON

• How is blood collected?• Blood on Clothing?

• Investigators submit whole pieces of clothing or they may use a sterile cloth square and a small amount of distilled water

• Dried blood on furniture?• Investigators send the whole object to

the lab

• Dried blood on a wall, tub or some other object too big or difficult to move to the lab?

• Investigators scrape the blood sample into a sterile container for further analysis

MAKING DNA FINGERPRINTS

• DNA fingerprinting is a laboratory procedure that requires six steps:

• 1: Isolation of DNA.

• 2: Cutting, sizing, and sorting.

• Special enzymes called restriction enzymes are used to cut the DNA at specific places

• 3: Transfer of DNA to nylon.The distribution of DNA pieces

• is transferred to a nylon sheet

• by placing the sheet on the gel

• and soaking them overnight.

• 4-5: Probing.Adding radioactive or colored probes to the nylon sheet produces a pattern called the DNA fingerprint.

• 4-6: DNA fingerprint.

• The final DNA fingerprint is built by using several probes (5-10 or more) simultaneously.

DNA ANALYSIS

RLFP

PCR

STR

RFLPRESTRICTION FRAGMENT LENGTH POLYMORPHISM

• Analyzes variable lengths of DNA fragments

• One of the original applications of DNA analysis

• Not used as much anymore because it requires a large quantity of DNA sample and samples degraded by the environment do not work well with RFLP

Restriction

Fragment

Length

Polymorphism

RFLP

Allele 1

Allele 2

GAATTC

GTTAAC

GAATTC

GTTAAC

CTGCAG

GAGCTC

CGGCAG

GCGCTC

PstI EcoRI

1 2 3

3Fragment 1+2

Different

Base Pairs

No restriction site

+

M A-1 A-2

Electrophoresis of

restriction fragments

M: Marker

A-1: Allele 1 Fragments

A-2: Allele 2 Fragments

THIS METHOD ANALYSES THE LENGTH OF THE STRANDS OF DIFFERENT DNA MOLECULES. THE DNA IS BROKEN INTO SMALL PIECES BY RESTRICTION ENZYMES. THEN ALL THOSE SMALL PIECES BECOME SEPARATED BY GEL ELECTROPHORESIS.RFLP, UNFORTUNATELY, IS NOT USED AS MUCH ANYMORE.

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PCRPOLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION

• Used to make millions of exact copies of DNA from a biological sample

• Allows very small samples to be analyzed, such as a sample of a few skin cells

• Must be very careful about contamination in this process

USED FOR DNA FINGERPRINTING AND PATERNITY TESTING. PCR IS USED TO ENLARGE A FEW PIECES OF DNA WHICH WOULD CREATE THOUSANDS

TO MILLIONS OF COPIES OF THAT ONE SAMPLE OF DNA.

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WHICH IS SHORT TANDEM REPEAT, IS THE MOST WIDELY

USED DURING CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS. STR

ANALYZES HOW MANY TIMES BASE PAIRS REPEAT THEMSELVES ON A

PARTICULAR LOCATION ON A STRAND OF DNA. THIS

METHOD IS A PCR-BASED TOOL BECAUSE IT USES SOME

COMPONENTS OF THE PCR METHOD.

40STRSHORT TANDEM REPORT

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DNA COMPARISON &ANALYSIS

• A DNA profile is created….how??

Markers are found by designing small pieces of DNA (probes) that will seek out and bind to complementary DNA sequences. This creates a distinct pattern. Again, one marker is not usually unique, but with four or five regions the match is likely

DNA COMPARISON &ANALYSIS

The DNA profiles are compared with samples from suspects to find possible matches.

DNA COMPARISON &ANALYSIS

If there are no suspects, a national database called CODIS may be used to find potential suspects.

• More on CODIS:

• Stands for Combined DNA Index System

• National Network that helps identify leads for crimes with no suspects

• Three tiers: Local (LDIS), State (SDIS), National (NDIS)

• Uses 13 DNA regions that vary from person to person

• Looks for matches at more than one location on a genome for more accurate results

Analysis of

Stained Gel

Determine

restriction fragment

sizes

• Create standard curve using DNA marker

• Measure distance traveled by restriction fragments

• Determine size of DNA fragments

Identify the related

samples

Define DNA FINGERPRINTING

Preparation of DNA FINGERPRINTING

Putting DNA to the TEST

Familial Relationships and DNA PROFILE

CASE STUDY

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Activity 8.5

DNA Fingerprint AnalysisCase 1

Mr. Chan’s family consists of mom, dad and four kids. The parents

have one daughter and one son together, another daughter is from the

mother’s previous marriage, and the other son is adopted. Here are

the DNA analysis results:

1. Which child is adopted? Why?

2. Which child is from the mother’s previous marriage? Why?

3. Who are the own children of Mr and Mrs Chan?

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Activity 8.5

Answers:

• Child 4 is adopted.

• Child 2 is the child from the mother’s previous marriage.

• Child 1 and Child 3 are own children of Mr and Mrs Chan.

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Activity 8.5

Case 2

A blood sample from a crime scene was collected. DNA samples of the victim and the potential suspects (June, Scarlet and John) were also collected for DNA analysis. The DNA profile is shown. Now, you should be able to identify the potential murderer.

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Activity 8.5

Answers:

• All of the DNA fragments of Scarlet can be

found in the crime scene sample making

her the most likely suspect.

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Activity 8.5

Extended discussions:

1. Both June and Scarlet have the same

DNA fragments (“8” and “12”), why?

2. Why DNA evidence must be combined

with the traditional forms of evidence

such as eyewitness accounts?

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Activity 8.5

Answers:

1. This pattern may arise if the two women are related or if this pattern were common in population.

2. Someone’s DNA is found at a crime scene does not mean that they committed the crime because of the following reasons:

(i)The DNA sample may be contaminated by the environment.

(ii) The sample may be a mixture of more than one person’s DNA.

(iii) The DNA evidence may be degraded or broken down.