Dismembered porcine limbs as a proxy for postmortem muscle protein degradation

The estimation of the postmortem interval (PMI) is of critical importance in forensic routine. The most frequently applied methods, however, are all restricted to specific time periods or must be excluded under certain circumstances. In the last years it has been shown that the analysis of muscle pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of legal medicine 2021-07, Vol.135 (4), p.1627-1636
Hauptverfasser: Geissenberger, J., Ehrenfellner, B., Monticelli, F. C., Pittner, Stefan, Steinbacher, Peter
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 1627
container_title International journal of legal medicine
container_volume 135
creator Geissenberger, J.
Ehrenfellner, B.
Monticelli, F. C.
Pittner, Stefan
Steinbacher, Peter
description The estimation of the postmortem interval (PMI) is of critical importance in forensic routine. The most frequently applied methods, however, are all restricted to specific time periods or must be excluded under certain circumstances. In the last years it has been shown that the analysis of muscle protein degradation has the potential to contribute to according delimitations in practice. In particular, upon biochemical analysis, the specific time points of degradation events provide reasonable markers for PMI delimitation. Nevertheless, considerable research is yet required to increase the understanding of protein decomposition and how it is affected by individual and environmental influencing factors. This is best investigated under standardized conditions, however, a considerate selection of proxies, regarding costs, effort, and expected outcome is required. Here, we use pigs to compare muscle protein decomposition in whole bodies and dismembered body parts (amputated hind limbs). Not only do experiments on body parts reduce the costs and allow easier handling in basic research, but also they aid to investigate the practical application of PMI estimation in dismembered body parts, or other extensive injuries, which are not unusual scenarios in crime investigation. Specifically, we investigated whether there are differences in the degradation rates of selected muscle proteins, sampled from dismembered legs and from hind limbs attached to whole pig bodies. Our results show distinct time-dependent degradation patterns of muscle proteins in a predictable manner regardless of sample origin. We are able to demonstrate that amputated hind limbs are suitable proxies for the analysis of muscle protein degradation, especially to investigate certain influencing factors and establish according standardized models.
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source MEDLINE; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; SpringerNature Journals
subjects Animals
Body parts
Corpse Dismemberment
Crime
Decomposition
Degradation
Forensic Medicine
Forensic pathology
Hogs
Investigations
Limbs
Medical Law
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Models, Animal
Muscle Proteins - metabolism
Muscle, Skeletal - metabolism
Muscles
Musculoskeletal system
Original
Original Article
Postmortem Changes
Proteins
Proteolysis
Swine
Time dependence
title Dismembered porcine limbs as a proxy for postmortem muscle protein degradation
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