Alexia Stettinius , Hal Holmes , Isabelle Mehochko , Annika Griggs , Qian Zhang , Misa Winters , Adam Maxwell , Jason Holliday , Eli Vlaisavljevich
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The use of genetic data for timber species and population assignment is a powerful tool for combating the illegal timber trade, but the challenges of extracting DNA from timber have prevented the routine use of genetics as a supply chain management tool. To overcome these challenges, we explored the feasibility of focused ultrasound extraction (FUSE) for rapid DNA release from timber. Using high-pressure ultrasound pulses, FUSE generates a cavitation bubble cloud that disintegrates samples into acellular debris, resulting in the mechanical release of DNA. In this work, FUSE was applied to white oak (Quercus alba) timber shavings to test the feasibility of using FUSE for timber DNA extraction for the first time. Results showed that FUSE processing disintegrated the tissue samples and released significant quantities of DNA. After five minutes of tissue processing DNA quantities of 0.21 ± 0.02 ng/mg, 0.99 ± 0.32 ng/mg, and 0.14 ± 0.01 ng/mg, were released from medium, coarse, and combination shaving groups, respectively. Amplification and sequencing of regions within the matK and rbcL chloroplast genes confirmed that the quality of DNA prepared with FUSE was suitable for PCR and short-read sequencing applications. Overall, these results show that FUSE can serve as a DNA sample preparation method capable of releasing high-quality DNA from timber in a fraction of the time required by conventional extraction methods. Based on the improved efficiency of DNA release with FUSE, ongoing work aims to develop this technology into portable systems that can be used to rapidly prepare timber samples for genetic species identification.
期刊介绍:
Forensic Science International: Genetics is the premier journal in the field of Forensic Genetics. This branch of Forensic Science can be defined as the application of genetics to human and non-human material (in the sense of a science with the purpose of studying inherited characteristics for the analysis of inter- and intra-specific variations in populations) for the resolution of legal conflicts.
The scope of the journal includes:
Forensic applications of human polymorphism.
Testing of paternity and other family relationships, immigration cases, typing of biological stains and tissues from criminal casework, identification of human remains by DNA testing methodologies.
Description of human polymorphisms of forensic interest, with special interest in DNA polymorphisms.
Autosomal DNA polymorphisms, mini- and microsatellites (or short tandem repeats, STRs), single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), X and Y chromosome polymorphisms, mtDNA polymorphisms, and any other type of DNA variation with potential forensic applications.
Non-human DNA polymorphisms for crime scene investigation.
Population genetics of human polymorphisms of forensic interest.
Population data, especially from DNA polymorphisms of interest for the solution of forensic problems.
DNA typing methodologies and strategies.
Biostatistical methods in forensic genetics.
Evaluation of DNA evidence in forensic problems (such as paternity or immigration cases, criminal casework, identification), classical and new statistical approaches.
Standards in forensic genetics.
Recommendations of regulatory bodies concerning methods, markers, interpretation or strategies or proposals for procedural or technical standards.
Quality control.
Quality control and quality assurance strategies, proficiency testing for DNA typing methodologies.
Criminal DNA databases.
Technical, legal and statistical issues.
General ethical and legal issues related to forensic genetics.