Abstract

Touch deposits are a routine yet challenging sample type in forensic casework and research. Recent work investigating their contents has indicated corneocytes to be the major cellular constituent while cell-free DNA is present at significant levels. Prolonged incubation including a reducing agent such as DTT has been shown to lyse corneocytes; a plasma cfDNA recovery kit which targets shorter DNA fragments has been demonstrated to improve cfDNA recovery from hand rinses. Herein these methods are combined and tested on mock casework touch deposit swabs from communal surface areas. Both fluorescence- and qPCR-based quantification methods are used and their results compared to query DNA degradation levels. Both proposed lysis and purification methods demonstrate increased recovery of DNA detectable with fluorescence quantification and some additional alleles at short loci, indicating high levels of fragmented DNA in these samples

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