DNA Forensics

35
DNA Forensics

description

DNA Forensics. DNA Fingerprinting - What is It?. Use of molecular genetic methods that determine the exact genotype of a DNA sample in a such a way that the results distinguish one biological organism from another This unique genotype = DNA Profile. It ’ s not that complicated. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of DNA Forensics

Page 1: DNA  Forensics

DNA Forensics

Page 2: DNA  Forensics

DNA Fingerprinting - What is It?

• Use of molecular genetic methods that determine the exact genotype of a DNA sample in a such a way that the results distinguish one biological organism from another

• This unique genotype = DNA Profile

Page 3: DNA  Forensics

It’s not that complicated• A DNA fingerprint is a method of

looking at the similarities and differences that exist in organisms’ DNA sequences

• Distinguish one biological organism from another

• Individually discriminating southern blot minisatellite hybridization profile

Page 4: DNA  Forensics

Collect Tissue Sample

How to do DNA FingerprintingThe Big Picture

>1000 cells

RFLP / Southern blot PCR AnalysisRFLP / Southern blot

>20 cells

Page 5: DNA  Forensics
Page 6: DNA  Forensics

DNA Fingerprinting RFLPDetermination of an individual’s unique collection of DNA restriction fragments

Page 7: DNA  Forensics

Collect Tissue Sample

How to do DNA FingerprintingThe Big Picture

>1000 cells

RFLP / Southern blot PCR AnalysisRFLP / Southern blot

>20 cells

Page 8: DNA  Forensics

Non Coding vs Coding DNA• The majority of our genome is made up non coding

DNA• How much?• Of this a large portion is of short sequences that are

repeated, sometimes hundreds of times. There are numerous forms of this "repetitive DNA"

Page 9: DNA  Forensics

Short Tandem Repeats(STR’s)

STR – region of DNA containing tandem copies of di-, tri- or tetranucleotide repeat units.

Examples:Dinucleotide repeats: GTGTGTGTGTGT……

Trinucleotide repeats: ACGACGACGACG……Tetranucleotide repeats:TATCTATCTATC……

Page 10: DNA  Forensics

More on STRs• Number of repeats varies greatly between

individuals• STRs make up 10-15% of the mammalian

genome• STRs are also called “microsatellites”

Page 11: DNA  Forensics

Possible Patterns for a Single “Gene” With Three Alleles

In a standard DNA fingerprint, about a dozen sites are analyzed, with each site having many possible alleles.

Page 12: DNA  Forensics
Page 13: DNA  Forensics

PCR = Polymerase Chain Reaction

Page 14: DNA  Forensics

What is It?• Basically DNA replication in a tube• Needs the same basic components as DNA

replication:

• DNA nucleotides, the building blocks for the new DNA • Template DNA, the DNA sequence that you want to

amplify • Primers, single-stranded DNAs between 20 and 50

nucleotides long that are complementary to a short region on either side of the template DNA

• Taq polymerase, a heat stable enzyme that drives, or catalyzes, the synthesis of new DNA

• Targets a particular sequence and amplifies it many many, many, many times

Page 16: DNA  Forensics

CODIS Loci• Combined DNA Index System• 13 Loci across human genome

Page 17: DNA  Forensics

Multilocus analysis - 7 loci

Page 18: DNA  Forensics
Page 19: DNA  Forensics
Page 20: DNA  Forensics
Page 21: DNA  Forensics
Page 22: DNA  Forensics
Page 24: DNA  Forensics

Grim Sleeper

Page 25: DNA  Forensics

MZ DZDZ

Monozygotic (Identical) and Dizygotic (Fraternal)

twins STR Analysis

Page 26: DNA  Forensics

Mitochondrial DNA

Page 27: DNA  Forensics
Page 28: DNA  Forensics
Page 29: DNA  Forensics
Page 30: DNA  Forensics

Y Chromosomal Inheritance

Page 31: DNA  Forensics
Page 32: DNA  Forensics
Page 33: DNA  Forensics
Page 34: DNA  Forensics

https://genographic.nationalgeographic.com

Page 35: DNA  Forensics

Homework

• See Blackboard for Assignments for this Special Topic