Abstract

Short tandem repeat (STR) is regarded as a crucial tool for personal identification as well as parentage testing. Thus, genotyping errors of STRs could have negative effects on the reliability of forensic identification. A null allele at the combined DNA index system (CODIS) core loci D2S1338 was found in a father-daughter pair with the AGCU Expressmarker 22 kit which was a commonly used commercial kit during our daily laboratory work. This null allele caused the father and daughter to not conform to the laws of inheritance, thus potentially generating erroneous conclusions that excluded parentage. To figure out the reason for this phenomenon, re-amplification with new primers and then large fragment Sanger sequencing was conducted. We found a G to G/T variation at the position which is fifty-nine bases away from the 3' end of the core repeat in both samples. This probably could be considered a novel variant at the primer binding region which had not been reported that resulted in the emergence of the null allele. We also found that there was more than one single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) with minor allele frequency (MAF) greater than 0.1 in the upstream and downstream sequences of D2S1338. When designing primers for amplification of D2S1338, the possible adverse results of these SNPs should be taken into account and avoided.

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