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Main Author: Schmerer, Wera M
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.12422
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author Schmerer, Wera M
author_facet Schmerer, Wera M
contents PCR-based analysis of DNA is utilized in a wide variety of fields, including Forensic Science. Aside from the more common ample sources, material analyzed here can refer to specimen excavated from a soil environment, or a sampling of the soil itself to recover DNA leached into the soil from decomposing human remains or from body fluids intermingled with the soil in an outdoor crime scene. The common problematic of these types of sample is the presence of humic acids, which are a component of any soil environment, and when the co-extracted with the DNA, lead to inhibition of enzyme-based procedures including PCR. While a variety of methods exist for the extraction of DNA from excavated skeletal remains, protocols for extraction of DNA from the soil directly are usually targeting soil microorganism. To address the need for methodology suitable for extraction of human DNA from soil, a selection of three published protocols were adapted for this purpose, to be tested and evaluated using standardized samples. The resulting protocols are presented here.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2405_12422
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Extraction of Human DNA from Soil: Protocol Adaptations
Schmerer, Wera M
Quantitative Methods
PCR-based analysis of DNA is utilized in a wide variety of fields, including Forensic Science. Aside from the more common ample sources, material analyzed here can refer to specimen excavated from a soil environment, or a sampling of the soil itself to recover DNA leached into the soil from decomposing human remains or from body fluids intermingled with the soil in an outdoor crime scene. The common problematic of these types of sample is the presence of humic acids, which are a component of any soil environment, and when the co-extracted with the DNA, lead to inhibition of enzyme-based procedures including PCR. While a variety of methods exist for the extraction of DNA from excavated skeletal remains, protocols for extraction of DNA from the soil directly are usually targeting soil microorganism. To address the need for methodology suitable for extraction of human DNA from soil, a selection of three published protocols were adapted for this purpose, to be tested and evaluated using standardized samples. The resulting protocols are presented here.
title Extraction of Human DNA from Soil: Protocol Adaptations
topic Quantitative Methods
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.12422