Abstract

Short tandem repeat analysis is challenging when dealing with unbalanced mixtures in forensic cases due to the presence of stutter peaks and large amplicons. In this research, we propose a novel genetic marker called DIP-TriSNP, which combines deletion/insertion polymorphism (DIP) with tri-allelic single nucleotide polymorphism in less than 230bp length of human genome. Based on multiplex PCR and SNaPShot, a panel, including 14 autosomal DIP-TriSNPs and one Y chromosomal DIP-SNP, had been developed and applied to genotyping 102 unrelated Han Chinese individuals in Sichuan of China and simulated a mixture study. The panel sensitivity can reach as low as 0.1ng DNA template, and the minor contributor of DNA can be detected with the highest ratio of 19:1, as indicated by the obtained results. In the Sichuan Han population, the cumulative probability of informative genotypes reached 0.997092, with a combined power of discrimination of 0.999999998801. The panel was estimated to detect more than two alleles in at least one locus in 99.69% of mixtures of the Sichuan Han population. In conclusion, DIP-TriSNPs have shown promising as an innovative DNA marker for identifying the minor contributor in unbalanced DNA mixtures, offering advantages such as short amplifications, increased polymorphism, and heightened sensitivity.

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