A rotationally-driven dynamic solid phase sodium bisulfite conversion disc for forensic epigenetic sample preparation
The approaches to forensic human identification (HID) are largely comparative in nature, relying upon the comparison of short tandem repeat profiles to known reference materials and/or database profiles. However, many profiles are generated from evidence materials that either do not have a reference...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Lab on a chip 2023-12, Vol.24 (1), p.97-112 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The approaches to forensic human identification (HID) are largely comparative in nature, relying upon the comparison of short tandem repeat profiles to known reference materials and/or database profiles. However, many profiles are generated from evidence materials that either do not have a reference material for comparison or do not produce a database hit. As an alternative to individualizing analysis for HID, researchers of forensic DNA have demonstrated that the human epigenome can provide a wealth of information. However, epigenetic analysis requires sodium b&cmb.b.line;is&cmb.b.line;ulfite c&cmb.b.line;onversion (BSC), a sample preparation method that is time-consuming, labor-intensive, prone to contamination, and characterized by DNA loss and fragmentation. To provide an alternative method for BSC that is more amenable to integration with the forensic DNA workflow, we describe a rotationally-driven, microfluidic method for dynamic solid phase-BSC (dSP-BSC) that streamlines the sample preparation process in an automated format, capable of preparing up to four samples in parallel. The method permitted decreased incubation intervals by ∼36% and was assessed for relative DNA recovery and conversion efficiency and compared to gold-standard and enzymatic approaches.
An alternative method for epigenetic sample preparation by a rotationlly-driven, microfluidic sodium bisulfite conversion system for up to four samples in parallel. |
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ISSN: | 1473-0197 1473-0189 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d3lc00867c |