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New Methods for Next-Generation Sequencing Analysis of Damaged and Mixed DNA Samples

NCJ Number
254589
Date Published
April 2020
Length
2 pages
Annotation

This article details a technique to make fragmented DNA more readable and a method to help pull individual profiles from mixed samples.

Abstract

Investigators who use next generation DNA sequences to identify individuals may encounter degraded or mixed samples. Using funding from the National Institute of Justice (NIJ), Cassandra Calloway, a scientist at Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute (California), has developed a technique to make fragmented DNA more discernible. She also designed, tested, and implemented an analytic tool that generates individual DNA profiles from a variety of mixture proportions. Both of these methods can be used for DNA profiling of samples too aged or damaged, such as those from the 9/11 attacks or the recent California wildfires, to produce any identifying information using standard forensic short tandem repeats. This article describes Calloway's research.