Mitochondrial Sequencing Of Missing Persons Dna Casework By Implementing Thermo Fisher'S Precision Id Mtdna Whole Genome Assay

Daniela Cuenca, Jessica Battaglia, Michelle Halsing,Sandra Sheehan

GENES(2020)

引用 18|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
The advent of massively parallel sequencing (MPS) in the past decade has opened the doors to mitochondrial whole-genome sequencing. Mitochondrial (mt) DNA is used in forensics due to its high copy number per cell and maternal mode of inheritance. Consequently, we have implemented the Thermo Fisher Precision ID mtDNA Whole Genome panel coupled with the Ion Chef (TM) and Ion S5 (TM) for MPS analysis in the California Department of Justice, Missing Persons DNA Program. Thirty-one mostly challenging samples (degraded, inhibited, low template, or mixed) were evaluated for this study. The majority of these samples generated single source full or partial genome sequences with MPS, providing information in cases where previously there was none. The quantitative and sensitive nature of MPS analysis was beneficial, but also led to detection of low-level contaminants. In addition, we found Precision ID to be more susceptible to inhibition than our legacy Sanger assay. Overall, the success rate (full single source hypervariable regions I and II (HVI/HVII) for Sanger and control region for MPS result) for these challenging samples increased from 32.3% with Sanger sequencing to 74.2% with the Precision ID assay. Considering the increase in success rate, the simple workflow and the higher discriminating potential of whole genome data, the Precision ID platform is a significant improvement for the CA Department of Justice Missing Persons DNA Program.
更多
查看译文
关键词
massively parallel sequencing,next-generation sequencing,mitochondrial DNA,forensics,human identification
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要