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A rare case of type II tri-allelic inheritance at vWA, SE33, D8S1179, and D13S317 loci demonstrated by STR analysis in paternity testing.

TitleA rare case of type II tri-allelic inheritance at vWA, SE33, D8S1179, and D13S317 loci demonstrated by STR analysis in paternity testing.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsGavale, Kishor S., Mahajan Vaishali B., Pande Amulya A., Shinde Apurva M., Thakare Vijay J., and Ghumatkar Sangita V.
JournalForensic Sci Med Pathol
Date Published2024 Feb 06
ISSN1556-2891
Abstract

Short tandem repeat (STR) typing has been regularly used in paternity disputes and forensic human identification linked caseworks. Occasionally, forensic scientists come across aberrant allele patterns during STR typing because of mutations, genetic variations, and other abnormalities. The tri-allelic pattern of STR is rare, particularly, the case where this pattern exists at 4 loci. Here, we report the type II tri-allelic patterns observed at vWA, SE33, D8S1179, and D13S317 loci in the product of conception (POC) sample during the course of our regular paternity case investigation. The DNA extracted from the blood samples and tissue of POC were subjected to STR typing for autosomal and sex STR loci using the commercial QIAGEN's Investigator IDplex Plus Kit and QIAGEN's Investigator 24plex QS Kit. Capillary electrophoresis was carried out in 3500 and 3500xL Genetic Analyzer Applied Biosystems and genotyped using GeneMapper ID-X Software v1.5 and v1.6. In this case of paternity inclusion, the POC sample displayed type II tri-allelic patterns at vWA (16, 19, 20), SE33 (19, 28.2, 29.2), D13S317 (16, 19, 20), and D8S1179 (10, 13, 17) loci. In addition, the POC displayed an abnormal genotype with a heterozygous peak imbalance (type II-B) of (1:2) pattern at D3S1358, D21S11, and D16S539 loci, of (2:1) pattern at D1S1656, D12S391, D10S1248, D2S1338, D2S441, D18S317, FGA, CSF1PO, and D5S818 loci, and type II-C allelic pattern (one single peak with triplicate height) at D19S433 and DS7820 loci. Understanding of such anomalous genotypes improves the knowledge about tri-allelic pattern of CODIS loci and helps in the appropriate interpretation of the results in STR typing.

DOI10.1007/s12024-024-00792-w
Alternate JournalForensic Sci Med Pathol
PubMed ID38316686
PubMed Central ID384990