首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


A D19S433 primer binding site mutation and the frequency in Japanese of the silent allele it causes
Authors:Mizuno Natsuko  Kitayama Tetsushi  Fujii Koji  Nakahara Hiroaki  Yoshida Kanako  Sekiguchi Kazumasa  Yonezawa Naoto  Nakano Minoru  Kasai Kentaro
Affiliation:National Research Institute of Police Science, Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan. mizuno@nrips.go.jp
Abstract:Short tandem repeat studies are powerful tools for parentage analysis and for identification of missing persons, victims of murder, and victims of mass fatalities when reference samples are unavailable. The primer in the Identifiler kit failed to amplify an allele at the D19S433 locus, producing a silent ("null") allele. The causal mutation is a base change (G>A) 32 nucleotides downstream from the 3' end of the AAGG repeats. The silent alleles are problematical in parentage analysis because when transmitted, they can cause a parent-child inconsistency that is unrelated to Mendelian genetics. The inconsistency is sometimes termed an "apparent opposite homozygosity" and it produces false evidence of nonparentage. Alternative primers were designed to amplify the D19S433 locus alleles and they detect the silent allele. Frequencies of the (no longer) silent allele were determined to be 0.0114 in 176 people from Shizuoka (Honshu) and 0.0128 in 156 people from Okinawa.
Keywords:forensic science  DNA typing  allele‐specific polymerase chain reaction  short tandem repeat  paternity testing  silent allele  D19S433
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号