Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP)
RFLP is a technique for analyzing the variable lengths of DNA fragments that result from digesting a DNA sample with a special kind of enzyme. This enzyme, a restriction endonuclease, cuts DNA at a specific sequence pattern know as a restriction endonuclease recognition site. The presence or absence of certain recognition sites in a DNA sample generates variable lengths of DNA fragments, which are separated using gel electrophoresis. They are then hybridized with DNA probes that bind to a complementary DNA sequence in the sample.
RFLP was one of the first applications of DNA analysis to forensic investigation. With the development of newer, more efficient DNA-analysis techniques, RFLP is not used as much as it once was because it requires relatively large amounts of DNA. In addition, samples degraded by environmental factors, such as dirt or mold, do not work well with RFLP.
PCR Analysis
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is used to make millions of exact copies of DNA from a biological sample. DNA amplification with PCR allows DNA analysis on biological samples as small as a few skin cells. With RFLP, DNA samples would have to be about the size of a quarter. The ability of PCR to amplify such tiny quantities of DNA enables even highly degraded samples to be analyzed. Great care, however, must be taken to prevent contamination with other biological materials during the identifying, collecting, and preserving of a sample.
STR Analysis
Short tandem repeat (STR) technology is used to evaluate specific regions (loci) within nuclear DNA. Variability in STR regions can be used to distinguish one DNA profile from another. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) uses a standard set of 13 specific STR regions for CODIS. CODIS is a software program that operates local, state, and national databases of DNA profiles from convicted offenders, unsolved crime scene evidence, and missing persons. The odds that two individuals will have the same 13-loci DNA profile is about one in a billion.
Mitochondrial DNA Analysis
Mitochondrial DNA analysis (mtDNA) can be used to examine the DNA from samples that cannot be analyzed by RFLP or STR. Nuclear DNA must be extracted from samples for use in RFLP, PCR, and STR; however, mtDNA analysis uses DNA extracted from another cellular organelle called a mitochondrion. While older biological samples that lack nucleated cellular material, such as hair, bones, and teeth, cannot be analyzed with STR and RFLP, they can be analyzed with mtDNA. In the investigation of cases that have gone unsolved for many years, mtDNA is extremely valuable.
All mothers have the same mitochondrial DNA as their offspring. This is because the mitochondria of each new embryo comes from the mother's egg cell. The father's sperm contributes only nuclear DNA. Comparing the mtDNA profile of unidentified remains with the profile of a potential maternal relative can be an important technique in missing-person investigations.
Y-Chromosome Analysis
The Y chromosome is passed directly from father to son, so analysis of genetic markers on the Y chromosome is especially useful for tracing relationships among males or for analyzing biological evidence involving multiple male contributors.
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Sunday, June 6, 2010
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- How Do We Inherit Our Biological Characteristics
- How are GM foods labeled?
- How are GM foods regulated and what is the govern...
- What are some of the criticisms against GM foods?
- How prevalent are GM crops? What plants are invol...
- What are some of the advantages of GM foods?
- What are genetically-modified foods?
- Reading Chapters In The Genome
- DNA Is Like A Library Of Instructions
- Reading the Sequences
- Unzipping DNA
- The DNA Sequence
- Inheritance
- Tracing Similarities And Differences In Our DNA
- Where Is DNA Found?
- Understanding Gene Testing
- Ethical, Legal, and Social Concerns about DNA Data...
- What are some of the DNA technologies used in fore...
- How is DNA typing done?
- Is DNA effective in identifying persons?
- How does forensic identification work?
- Exceptions to Mendel's Laws
- How Does Inheritance Work?
- Mutations and the Next Generation
- Mechanisms of Genetic Variation and Heredity
- The Influence of DNA Structure and Binding Domains
- Controlling Transcription
- Gene Switching: Turning Genes On and Off
- How Many Genes Do Humans Have?
- Structural Genes, Junk DNA, and Regulatory Sequences
- From Genes to Proteins: Start to Finish
- Gene Prediction Using Computers
- The Core Gene Sequence: Introns and Exons
- Proteins
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- Why Study Mitochondria?
- Why Is There a Separate Mitochondrial Genome?
- The Physical Structure of the Human Genome
- WHAT IS A GENOME?
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