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Recovery of Environmental Human DNA by Insects*,†
Authors:Karen M. Kester Ph.D.  Mary H. Toothman M.S.  Bonnie L. Brown Ph.D.  W. Scott Street IV Ph.D.  Tracey D. Cruz Ph.D.
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1000?W. Cary Street, Richmond, VA 23284‐2012.;2. Department of Statistical Sciences and Operations Research, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1015 Floyd Avenue, Richmond, VA 23284‐3083.;3. Department of Forensic Science, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1000 W. Cary Street, Richmond, VA 23284‐2012.
Abstract:Abstract: We tested the hypotheses that foraging insects can acquire human DNA from the environment and that insect‐delivered human DNA is of sufficient quantity and quality to permit standard forensic analyses. Houseflies, German cockroaches, and camel crickets were exposed to dusty surfaces and then assayed for human mitochondrial and nuclear loci by conventional and qPCR, and multiplex STR amplification. Over two experiments, 100% of insect groups and 94% of dust controls tested positive for human DNA. Of 177 individuals, 33–67% tested positive and 13 yielded quantifiable human DNA (mean = 0.022 ± 0.006 ng; mean dust control = 2.448 ± 0.960 ng); four had at least one positive allele call for one or more locus; eight others showed multiple peaks at some loci. Results imply that application to routine forensic casework is limited given current detection methodology yet demonstrate the potential use of insects as environmental samplers for human DNA.
Keywords:forensic science  forensic entomology  human DNA dust  surveillance  environmental sampling  mitochondrial DNA  nuclear DNA  quantitative polymerase chain reaction  short tandem repeats
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