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“The capacity to blunder slightly is the real marvel of DNA. Without this special attribute, we would still be anaerobic bacteria and there would be no music.” —Lewis Thomas, Physician, author DNA Analysis http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMDm9IC4-2c Students will learn: That DNA is a long-chain polymer found in nucleated cells, which contain genetic information. That DNA can be used to identify or clear potential suspects in crimes. How DNA is extracted and characterized. How to apply the concepts of RFLP, PCR, and STRs to characterize DNA. The role that statistics plays in determining the probability that two people would have the same sequence in a fragment of DNA. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 1 DNA Analysis Students will be able to: Explain that DNA is a long molecule, tightly packed in the form of a chromosome with genetic material wrapped around it. Isolate and extract DNA from cells. Describe the function and purpose of a restriction enzyme. Calculate probabilities of identity using STR. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 2 Historical Information James Watson and Francis Crick—1953 discovered the configuration of the DNA molecule Ray White—1980 describes first polymorphic RFLP marker Alec Jeffreys—1985 isolated DNA markers and called them DNA fingerprints Kary Mullis—1985 developed PCR testing 1988—FBI starts DNA casework 1991—first STR paper 1998—FBI launches CODIS database Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 3 People of Historical Significance James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice Wilkins jointly received the Nobel Prize in 1962 for their determination of the structure of DNA. What is interesting about this fact is that Rosalind Franklin had as much to do with the discovery as the other three gentlemen with her work with X-ray crystallography. She died of cancer and could not be honored for her work. Find out more at Chemical Achievers: http://www.chemheritage.org/classroom/chemach/pharmaceuticals/watson-crick.html Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 4 General DNA Information Double helix—two coiled DNA strands Composed of nucleotides—units containing a sugar molecule (deoxyribose), phosphate group and a nitrogen-containing base In humans, the order of these bases is 99.9% the same. Four bases Adenine Cytosine Guanine Thymine Bases always pair A to T and G to C Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 5 Where Is DNA Found? Genes are portions of DNA that code for specific proteins DNA is found in all nucleated body cells—white blood cells, semen, saliva, urine, hair root, teeth, bone, tissue Most abundant in buccal (cheek) cells Red blood cells have no nuclei; and therefore, no nuclear DNA DNA obtained from blood comes from white blood cells Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 6 Blood Cells Saliva Sperm Fingernail Chapter 11 Skin Cells Hair Root Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 7 Blood At one time, blood at a crime scene was significant to investigators for its presence alone — bloodstains and spatters often tell their own story of events. But today scientists can perform further tests, including blood typing and DNA analysis, that can help identify the victim or offender. Pictured here is a color-enhanced image of blood cells and platelets, magnified over 5,200 times by a scanning electron microscope. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 8 Chapter 11 Saliva Investigators can extract DNA from saliva left behind on items such as cigarettes, envelopes or drinking straws at the crime scene to help identify their killer or victim. One suspect was connected to the World Trade Center bombing, for example, after authorities matched his DNA with that from saliva on an envelope delivered by one of the conspirators. This saliva has been magnified 40 times.9 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company Sperm In cases of rape and other sexual crimes, the seminal fluid left by the attacker can provide important evidence. Since sperm remains alive for only a short period of time, its condition can indicate the time of the attack; such samples can also provide information on blood type and now identity, through DNA. Pictured here is a colorenhanced image of sperm, magnified over 3,000 times by a scanning electron microscope. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 10 Fingernail While their utility is still under debate, fingernails, like fingerprints, are thought to be unique and thus useful in linking suspects to crime scenes. This is because the underside of fingernails and toenails have grooves, called striations, that form a pattern unique to each finger or toe; nails from one individual match up to their owner much like bullets fired from the same gun. Fingernail evidence has been used in several U.S. cases since the mid-1970s. Pictured here is a section of fingernail magnified over 300 times by a scanning electron microscope. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 11 Hair Root Forensic scientists can analyze the DNA found in the cells of a single hair root to identify their killer or victim. Investigators often find hairs with roots attached at crime scenes, indicating a struggle took place. Pictured here is a colorenhanced image of a hair root, magnified over 90 times by a scanning electron microscope. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 12 Human Skin DNA can sometimes be obtained from skin cells that an attacker unwittingly leaves beneath the fingernails of a victim during a fight. In one case, police found a victim with hair clutched in her hand and skin under her nails; investigators were able to use this evidence to link her husband to the crime. Pictured here is a color-enhanced image of a healthy skin surface, magnified nearly 1,000 times by a scanning electron microscope. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 13 DNA Typing DNA typing is a method in which DNA is converted into a series of bands that ultimately distinguish each individual. Only one-tenth of a single percent of DNA (about 3 million bases) differs from one person to the next. Scientists use these regions to generate a DNA profile of an individual. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 14 Non-Coding Regions 3 percent of the human DNA sequences code for proteins 97 percent is non-coding and is repetitive; repeating the same sequence over and over 50 percent of the human genome has interspersed repetitive sequences Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 15 Uses of DNA Profiling Chapter 11 To identify potential suspects To exonerate individuals To identify crime and casualty victims To establish paternity To match organ donors Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 16 DNA TYPING “Fingerprinting” RFLP—Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism PCR—Polymerase Chain Reaction STR—Short Tandem Repeats Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 17 RFLP—Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphisms Restriction enzymes are used to cut DNA into smaller fragments that can then be separated and characterized for identification Isolate—separate DNA from the cell Cut—using restriction enzymes to make shorter base strands Sort—by size using electrophoresis Analyze—the specific alleles for identification Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 18 PCR—Polymerase Chain Reaction PCR is a technique used for making copies of a defined segment of a DNA molecule. This can be valuable when the amount of evidence is minimal. Millions of copies of DNA can be made from a single speck of blood. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 19 PCR—Polymerase Chain Reaction Procedure Heat the DNA strands, causing the strands to separate (unzip). Cool the mixture and add a primer, a short sequence of base pairs that will add to its complementary sequence on the DNA strand. Finally, add a DNA polymerase and a mixture of free nucleotides to the separated strands. Heat again to around 75° C for the completion. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 20 PCR—Polymerase Chain Reaction The outcome is a doubling of the number of DNA strands. Heating, cooling, and strand rebuilding is repeated typically 25 to 30 times, yielding more than one million copies of the original DNA molecule. Each cycle takes less than two minutes from start to finish. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 21 Advantages of PCR Minute amounts of DNA may be used for amplification. DNA degraded to fragments only a few hundred base pairs in length can serve as effective templates for amplification. Large numbers of copies of specific DNA sequences can be amplified simultaneously with multiplex PCR reactions. Commercial kits are now available for easy PCR reaction setup and amplification. Contaminant DNA, such as fungal and bacterial sources, will not amplify because human-specific primers are used. However, human contamination can be a problem. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 22 Electrophoresis A technique used to separate DNA fragments. An electrical current is moved through a gel substance causing molecules to sort by size. The smaller, lighter molecules will move the furthest on the gel. After developing, the fragments can be visualized for characterization. animation Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 23 Electrophoresis Pipette the DNA. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 24 Electrophoresis Load DNA into the gel wells. Electrophoresis video Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 25 Electrophoresis Run the gel. Observe and compare bands of DNA. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 26 X-ray of results Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 27 Short Tandem Repeats (STR) STR is another method of DNA typing. STR’s are locations (loci) on the chromosome that contain short sequences of 2 to 5 bases that repeat themselves in the DNA molecule. The advantages of this method are that it provides greater discrimination, requires less time, a smaller sample size, and the DNA is less susceptible to degradation. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 28 Karyotype- show number and appearance of an organism’s chromosomes. Genes are located on the chromosomes. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 29 Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 30 Short Tandem Repeats (STR) Procedure Extract the gene TH01 from the sample. (TH01 has seven human variants with a repeating sequence of A-A-T-G) Amplify the sample by means of PCR Separate by electrophoresis Examine the distance the STR migrates to determine the number of times TH01 repeats Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 31 Short Tandem Repeats (STR) Each person has two STR types for TH01—one inherited from each parent. By continuing the process with additional STRs from other genes, you can narrow down the probability of DNA belonging to only one person. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 32 Short Tandem Repeats (STR) STR typing is visualized by peaks shown on a graph. Each represents the size of the DNA fragment. The possible alleles are numbered for each loci. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 33 Profiler Plus Allelic Ladders VWA D3S1358 AMEL D8S1179 D5S818 FGA D21S11 D13S317 D18S51 D7S820 COfiler Allelic Ladders D3S1358 AMEL D16S539 TH01 TPOX CSF1PO D7S820 STR Example Determining Probability Databases have been established that determine how often a particular allele on a loci appears in a given population. By increasing the number of alleles on different loci the probability of having two people with the exact combination becomes miniscule. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 38 DNA Interactive The website below has a STR animation demonstration. Click on human identification, profiling and then on the third circle called Today’s DNA Profiling to see the demonstration. http://www.dnai.org/d/index.html Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 39 Three Possible Outcomes Match—The DNA profile appears the same. Lab will determine the frequency. Exclusion—The genotype comparison shows profile differences that can only be explained by the two samples originating from different sources. Inconclusive—The data does not support a conclusion as to whether the profiles match. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 40 Types of DNA Nuclear Mitochondrial found in the nucleus found in the cytoplasm constitutes 23 pairs of is inherited only from chromosomes inherited mother from both parents each cell contains each cell contains only hundreds to thousands one nuclei of mitochondria can be found in skeletal remains Nuclear DNA is present in the head of the sperm. Mitochondrial DNA is present in the tail. At conception, the head of the sperm enters the egg and unites with the nucleus. The tail falls off, losing the father’s mitochondrial DNA. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 41 Mitochondrial DNA Analysis of mDNA is more: rigorous time consuming costly than nucleic testing of DNA mDNA is constructed in a circular or loop 37 genes are involved in mitochondrial energy generation Is used when nuclear DNA typing is not possible Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 42 FBI’s CODIS DNA Database Combined DNA Index System Used for linking serial crimes and unsolved cases with repeat offenders Launched October 1998 Links all 50 states Requires >4 RFLP markers and/or 13 core STR markers Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 43 The Future Greater automation of the DNA typing process Use of SNP’s—single nucleotide polymorphism which measures a one nucleotide change or difference from one individual to another. More sites are needed to differentiate between individuals (30 to 50 SNPs to attain the frequencies of the 13 STR loci), but it can be done with robots and automation. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 44 People in the News Sir Alec Jeffreys is credited with DNA profiling using RFLP. In September of 1984 after years of work, he saw his first series of blots on an X-ray. The technique was first used in forensics, when in 1985 he was asked by police to confirm the rape confession of 17 year old Richard Buckland, who was denying a rape of another young woman. The DNA from Buckland and the DNA taken from the victims eliminated him as a suspect. Jefferys then used samples from other suspects to later convict Colin Pitchfork whose DNA did match. Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 45 More about DNA For additional information about DNA and some famous cases, check out Court TV’s Crime Library at: www.crimelibrary.com/criminal_mind/forensics/dna/1.html Chapter 11 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 46