| Literature DB >> 31428537 |
António Amorim1,2, Teresa Fernandes3,4, Nuno Taveira5,6.
Abstract
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) presents several characteristics useful for forensic studies, especially related to the lack of recombination, to a high copy number, and to matrilineal inheritance. mtDNA typing based on sequences of the control region or full genomic sequences analysis is used to analyze a variety of forensic samples such as old bones, teeth and hair, as well as other biological samples where the DNA content is low. Evaluation and reporting of the results requires careful consideration of biological issues as well as other issues such as nomenclature and reference population databases. In this work we review mitochondrial DNA profiling methods used for human identification and present their use in the main cases of humanidentification focusing on the most relevant issues for forensics.Entities:
Keywords: Forensic biology; Human identification; Legal medicine; mtDNA
Year: 2019 PMID: 31428537 PMCID: PMC6697116 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.7314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1The human mitochondrial DNA genome with genes and control regions labeled.
Adapted from Picard, Wallace & Burelle (2016).
Guidelines of the DNA Commission of the International Society of Forensic Genetics, 2014.
| General recommendations/ good laboratory practice | Recommendation #1 | Good laboratory practice and specific protocols for work with mtDNA must be followed in accordance with previous guidelines |
| Recommendation #2 | Negative and positive controls as well as extraction reagent blanks must be carried through the entire laboratory process | |
| Recommendation #3 | Reported consensus sequences must be based on redundant sequence information, using forward and reverse sequencing reactions whenever practical | |
| Recommendation #4 | Manual transcription of data should be avoided and independent confirmation of consensus haplotypes by two scientists must be performed | |
| Recommendation #5 | Laboratories using mtDNA typing in forensic casework shall participate regularly in suitable proficiency testing programs | |
| Targeted region, amplification and sequencing ranges | Recommendation #6 | In population genetic studies for forensic databasing purposes, the entire mitochondrial DNA control region should be sequenced. |
| Reference sequence | Recommendation #7 | MtDNA sequences should be aligned and reported relative to the revised Cambridge Reference Sequence (rCRS, NC001807), and should include the interpretation range (excluding primer sequence information) |
| Alignment and notation | Recommendation #8 | IUPAC conventions using capital letters shall be used to describe differences to the rCRS and (point heteroplasmic) mixtures. Lower case letters should be used to indicate mixtures between deleted and non-deleted (inserted and non-inserted) bases. N-designations should only be used when all four bases are observed at a single position (or if no base call can be made at a given position). For the representation of deletions, “DEL”, “del” or “S” shall be used |
| Recommendation #9 | The alignment and notation of mtDNA sequences should be performed in agreement with the mitochondrial phylogeny (established patterns of mutations). Tools to assist with the notation of mtDNA sequences are available at | |
| Heteroplasmy | Recommendation #10 | In forensic casework, laboratories must establish their own interpretation and reporting guidelines for observed length and point heteroplasmy. The evaluation of heteroplasmy depends on the limitations of the technology and the quality of the sequencing reactions as well as the experience of the laboratory. Differences in both PHP and LHP do not constitute evidence for excluding two otherwise identical haplotypes as deriving from the same source or same maternal lineage |
| Recommendation #11 | For population database samples, length heteroplasmy in homopolymeric sequence stretches should be interpreted by calling the dominant variant, which can be determined by identifying the position with the highest representation of a non-repetitive peak downstream of the affected stretch | |
| Haplogrouping of mtDNA sequences | Recommendation #12 | MtDNA population data should be subjected to analytical software tools that facilitate phylogenetic checks for data quality control. A comprehensive suite of QC tools is provided by EMPOP |
| Databases and database searches | Recommendation #13 | The entire database of available sequences should be searched with respect to the sequencing (interpretation) range to avoid biased query results |
| Recommendation #14 | Laboratories must be able to justify the choice of database(s) and statistical approach used in reporting | |
| Recommendation #15 | Laboratories must establish statistical guidelines for use in reporting an mtDNA match between two samples | |
| Recommendation #16 | Highly variable positions such as length variants in homopolymeric stretches should be disregarded from searches for determining frequency estimates. Heteroplasmic calls should be queried in a manner that does not exclude any of the heteroplasmic variants |
Figure 2Representation of the geographical origin of the main mtDNA haplogroups, based on Lott et al. (2014).
Selected published cases of human identification with mtDNA.
| Reference/Year | Studied samples | mtDNA studied regions | Used methodologies | Reference samples | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stoneking M, Hedgecock D, Higuchi RG, Vigilant L, Erlich HA. Population variation of human mtDNA control region sequences detected by enzymatic amplification and sequence-specific oligonucleotide probes. Am J Hum Genet. | Skeletal remains of a human child, found in 1986 | HVI, HVII | PCR for amplification | Parents of a 3-year-old child disappeared from home in 1984 | Identical mtDNA sequence in skeletal remains and sample of the 3-year-old child mother |
| Sullivan KM, Hopgood R, Gill P. Identification of human remains by amplification and automated sequencing of mitochondrial DNA. Int J Legal Med. | Body of a female, in an advanced state of decomposition discovered in 1990 | HVI, HVII | PCR for amplification | Blood sample from a sister of a deceased female at the same region | No differences were observed between the corpse and blood from the putative sister |
| Gill P, Ivanov PL, Kimpton C, Piercy R, Benson N, Tully G, et al. Identification of the remains of the Romanov family by DNA analysis. Nat Genet. | Nine skeletons found in a grave in Ekaterinburg, Russia, 1991 | HVI, HVII | PCR for amplification | Blood sample from Gt. Gt. Grandson of Louise of Hesse-Cassel and from Gt. Gt. Gt. Granddaughter of Louise of Hesse-Cassel | Exact sequence between putative Tsarina Alexandra and putative three children. |
| Ivanov PL, Wadhams MJ, Roby RK, Holland MM WV& PT. Mitochondrial DNA sequence heteroplasmy in the Grand Duke of Russia Georgij Romanov establishes the authenticity of the remains of Tsar Nicholas II. Nat Genet. | Skeleton of putative Tsar Nicholas II | HVI, HVII | PCR for amplification | Skeleton of Grand Duke of Russia Georgij Romanov (Tsar’s brother) | Establishment of the authenticity of the remains of Tsar Nicholas II |
| Deng YJ, Li YZ, Yu XG, Li L, Wu DY, Zhou J, et al. Preliminary DNA identification for the tsunami victims in Thailand. Genomics, Proteomics Bioinforma. | 258 tooth samples from killed people at the 2004 Southeast Asia Thailand Tsunami | HVI, HVII | PCR for amplification | 200 relatives of the tsunami victims | 200 tsunami victims have been identified, including both Thai nationals and foreign tourists from several nations |
| Ríos L, García-Rubio A, Martínez B, Alonso A, Puente J. Identification process in mass graves from the Spanish Civil War II. Forensic Sci Int. | Skeletal remains exhumed from a mass grave from the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) | HVI, HVII | PCR for amplification | Sister of the youngest person presumptively known to be buried in the grave | Match between mtDNA profiles of the biologically youngest skeleton and the sister of the youngest person presumptively known to be buried in the grave |
| Piccinini A, Coco S, Parson W, Cattaneo C, Gaudio D, Barbazza R, et al. World war one Italian and Austrian soldier identification project: DNA results of the first case. Forensic Sci Int Genet. | Remains of missing soldiers occasionally found during excavations | HVI, HVII | PCR for amplification | Offspring of the italian soldier Libero Zugni Tauro | Both mtDNA and Y-STR data showed clear exclusion scenarios |
| King TE, Fortes GG, Balaresque P, Thomas MG, Balding D, Delser PM, et al. Identification of the remains of King Richard III. Nat Commun. | Skeleton excavated at the presumed site of the Grey Friars friary in Leicester, 2012 | Whole mitochondrial genome | PCR for amplification | Saliva samples of the modern relatives of Richard III | Positive mtDNA match between the only known female-line of Richard III and studied modern relatives of Richard III |
| Ossowski A, Diepenbroek M, Kupiec T, Bykowska-Witowska M, Zielińska G, Dembińska T, et al. Genetic Identification of Communist Crimes’ Victims (1944–1956) Based on the Analysis of One of Many Mass Graves Discovered on the Powazki Military Cemetery in Warsaw, Poland. J Forensic Sci. | Remains of eight people buried in one of many mass graves, which were found at the cemetery Powazzki Military in Warsaw, Poland | HVI, HVII | PCR for amplification | Reference material was collected from the closest living relatives of Communist Crimes’ Victims (1944–1956) | Positive mtDNA match between 6 putative victims and 6 living relatives |
| Ambers AD, Churchill JD, King JL, Stoljarova M, Gill-King H, Assidi M, et al. More comprehensive forensic genetic marker analyses for accurate human remains identification using massively parallel DNA sequencing. BMC Genomics. | Human skeletal remains with 140-year-old discovered at a historical site in Deadwood, South Dakota, United States | HVI, HVII and ten fragments of mtDNA coding region | PCR for amplification | Not used | Results were consistent with previous anthropological report that points to a male of European ancestry |