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FORENSIC SCIENCE Serology 1 What is forensic serology? Forensic serology- is the study of blood serum, along with saliva, semen and other bodily fluids found at a crime scene. 2 Blood Characteristics • Plasma--fluid portion of the blood (55%) • Cells (45%) – Erythrocytes--red blood cells; responsible for oxygen distribution – Leukocytes--white blood cells; responsible for “cleaning” the system of foreign invaders – Thrombocytes--platelets; responsible for blood clotting • Serum--liquid that separates from the blood when a clot is formed 3 Blood components 4 In addition, blood has: •Water •Cells •Enzymes •Proteins •Other inorganic substances 5 Blood components 6 Blood Questions to be answered: • Is it blood? • Is it human blood? • Whose is it? 7 Presumptive Tests for Blood • Kastle-Meyer color test--phenolophthalein and hydrogen peroxide are mixed together the blood’s hemoglobin will cause the formation of a deep pink color. • Leucomalachite test--leucomalachite green mixed with acetic acid and distilled water; then a drop of sodium perborate will turn blood green and then darken. 8 Other Tests for Blood • Luminol test--reaction with blood results in the production of light. • Microcrystalline tests--add specific chemicals to the blood in order to form characteristic crystals – Takayama – Teichmann 9 Human vs. Animal Blood • Microscopic analysis • Precipitin test – blood is injected into a rabbit – anti-human antibodies are formed – anti-human antibodies which are then extracted from the rabbit's serum – If this antiserum is then placed on a sample from the crime scene, and the blood displays clotting, the forensic investigator can conclude that the blood is human blood. – precipitin line forms if sample is human blood 10 Bloodstain Analysis: Animal Blood? *precipitin line forms if sample is human blood Is It Human? Microscopic Analysis Frog Blood Human Blood 12 Historical Perspective Of Blood Typing 1901- Karl Landsteiner: ABO typing based on antigen-antibody reaction. 1915- Leone Lattes: applied ABO typing to dried stains 1940- Landsteiner and Weiner: Rh factor 85% of Caucasians, 94% of Black Americans and 99% of Asians are Rh positive. 13 Blood Grouping During the late 1930s, a series of antigen-antibody reactions were discovered in blood, the most common ones being ABH, MN, Rh, and Gm. There are more than 256 antigens, and twenty-three blood group systems based on association with these antigens. A fundamental principle of serology is that for every antigen, there exists a specific antibody. In fact, all blood groups are defined by the antigens on their red blood cells and the antibodies in their serum. Rh Factor (antigen in serum) Blood can also be categorized using the Rh (Rhesus disease) factor. If an individual has a positive Rh factor, this means that his/her blood contains a protein that is also found in Rhesus monkeys. Approximately 85% of the population has a positive Rh factor, and doctors are trained to monitor closely any woman who is Rh negative and becomes pregnant. When a Rh(-) woman becomes pregnant with Rh(+) child, the woman's body might naturally produce antibodies that attack the baby's blood, he result of this incompatibility will not affect the health of the mother, but it can affect the child's health. Potential health problems include jaundice, anemia, and brain or heart damage. In severe cases, Rh disease can kill the baby. 16 Nature of Blood: Antigens in Red Blood Cells Red blood cells have antigens on their surface. An antigen is a substance that when introduced into the body stimulates the production of an antibody. Antigens include toxins, bacteria, foreign blood cells, and the cells of transplanted organs. RBC: Antigens Prior to birth, your lymphocytes learn which cells belong as part of your body, and see those as non-antigenic or safe. Your immune system recognizes "you" and does not try to destroy those cells. This is called immunotolerance. Any new substance noted by the immune system will be considered an invader and destroyed. 18 Blood types 19 Nature of Blood: Serum -yellow hue -contains white blood cells and platelets -determine the freshness of a blood sample by examining serum because it clots several minutes after exposure to air. -in addition, serum contains antibodies, proteins floating in blood fluid. The purpose of an antibody is to identify and neutralize antigens so that they cannot make the host organism sick. Blood Typing Blood typing requires two antiserums: anti-A and anti-B. By inserting a droplet of these antiserums in samples of blood, one can determine which samples maintain a normal appearance and which samples become clotted, or agglutinated, under microscopic examination. Type-A blood will be agglutinated by anti-A serum; Type-B blood will be agglutinated by anti-B serum; Type-AB blood by both; and Type-O blood by neither. Blood Groups Type Antigen Antibody Can Give Blood To: Can Get Blood From A A B A, AB O, A B B A B, AB O,B AB A and B Neither A nor B AB A, B, O, AB O Neither A nor B A and B A, B, O, AB O 22 Blood Reactions to Antiserum REACTION Anti-A Serum Agglutination Anti-B Serum No agglutination No agglutination Agglutination Agglutination Agglutination No agglutination No agglutination BLOOD TYPE Type A Type B Type AB Type O 23 Population Distribution of Blood Types in the U. S. Type Percent O 45 A 39 B 12 AB 4 24 Differentiating Blood Types ABO and Rh factors Iso-enzymes: Enzymes that exist in different forms are called polymorphic and can be broken down into their separate proteins. 25 Commonly Used Blood Enzymes and Proteins Adenosine deaminase Adenylate kinase Carbonic anhydrase II Erythrocyte acid phosphatase Esterase D Glucose-6-Phosphate dehydrogenase G6PD Glyoxylase U Group-specific component Ge Haptoglobin Peptidase A Phosphoglucomutase 6-Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase 6PGD Transferrin AD AK CA II EAP EsD GLO I Hp Pep A PGM 26 Tf Product Rule • Type A • Rh(-) • PGM-2 39% 15% 6% (.39) * (.15) * (.06) = .00351 1/.00351 = 284.9 27 Sperm • Among the smallest and most highly specialized cells in the human body. • Has a head and a tail • Contains 23 chromosomes with the genetic material found in the head • Males release 2.5 to 6 milliliters of seminal fluid per ejaculation with approximately 100 million sperm per milliliter. Magnified 400X 28 Semen Determination of Seminal Fluid • Acid phosphatase color test – acid phosphatase will turn purple in the presence of sodium alpha naphthylphosphate and Fast Blue B. – will fluoresce under UV light when it comes in contact with 4-methyl umbelliferyl phosphate. 29 Acid phosphatase color test 30 Semen Determination of Seminal Fluid • Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) or p30--unique to seminal plasma – P30 is isolated and injected into a rabbit where antibodies are produced (anti-p30) – The formation of a precipitation line shows the presence of p30 in the sample stain. It must be seminal fluid. 31 Secretors • 80% of people are considered secretors. Their blood-type antigens are found in high concentration in their body fluids such as saliva, semen,vaginal secretions and gastric juice. If you are a secretor, you will have a higher concentration of A and B antigens than does your blood!! • With the advent of DNA, the secretor evidence is not as important as it once was. 32