Title: Forensic Serology
1Forensic Serology
2Introduction
- Karl Landsteiner noticed that blood could be
typed 1901 - Prior to 1900, blood was transfused and usually
failed - Classification system A-B-O system
- Gave key for properly matching donor blood to the
recipient - In 1937 Rh factor had been determined
- 100 more factor have been identified since
3ABO forensic implication
- Forensic scientists focused on factors (ABO) for
linking blood to an individual - No 2 individuals would have same combination of
factors - Exception - identical twins
- Locards exchange principal
- Provides strong evidence for linking the suspect
- DNA technology has replaced ABO factor linkage
4Blood
- Mixture of cells, enzymes, proteins and inorganic
substances - Fluid portion plasma
- Mostly water
- Solid portion erythrocytes, leukocytes and
platelets - Fibrin protein that traps and enmeshes RBCs
causing a clot (scab)
5Antigens and antibodies
- Surface chemical structures on RBCs antigens
- Most important
- A, B and Rh
- Type A or B
- RBCs have the A or B antigen respectively
- Type AB
- RBCs have both A and B antigens
- Type O
- RBCs have neither A or B antigens
6Antigens and antibodies continued
- Rh factor known as the D antigen is important
- Positive or negative
- Problems occur in pregnant women who are
negative and - Have babies who are positive
- The babies blood in a 2nd pregnancy attacks the
mothers blood or vise versa - Death of one or both
7Serum
- Liquid that separates from blood during clotting
- Contains antibodies Proteins
- For every antigen is a specific antibody
- Anti-A is for antigen A
- Antiserum cause agglutination by bivalent
attachment - You dont want agglutination
8Immunoassay techniques
- Most common analytic method
- Used for detecting drugs/toxins in blood and
urine - Antibodies for drugs dont exist naturally
- Can be produced in animals
- Combine drug with protein
- Inject animal (rabbit)
- Acts as antigen stimulating animal to produce
antibodies
9Immunoassay techniques continued
- Each day thousands volunteer for urine drug
testing - Military personnel
- Transportation industry employees
- Police and correction personnel
- Pre-employment individuals
- Serum is added to urine and reacts with the drugs
- Results must be confirmed with further testing
10Radioimmunoassay (RIA) and EMIT
- RIA uses drugs labeled with radioactive tags
- EMIT Enzyme-multiplied immunoassay technique
- Uses enzyme tag
- Caution
- Any chemical structurally similar to a drug will
give a false positive - Neither test is drug specific
11EMIT at a closer look
- Rapid and has great sensitivity for detecting
drugs in urine - Antibodies for a drug are added to suspect urine
- Used frequently to determine marijuana use
- Antibodies against the metabolites of marijuana
- Problem the test does not give accurate reading
of when the use occurred - 2-5 days to see results, up to 10 days yielding
positive results
12Polyclonal Antibodies
- Animal that is injected with the antigen produces
many antibodies - The antibodies attack different parts of the
antigen - Disadvantage
- Antibodies may vary in composition and their
ability to bind
13Monoclonal Antibodies
- Used to attack one and only one location of the
antigen - Inject the mouse
- Remove the spleen and isolate cells that produce
the antibody of interest - Fuse spleen cell to a cancer cell -gt hybridoma
cell - Grow hybrid cells
- Culture the hybrid cells for limitless supply of
antibody
14Bloodstains
- Following questions must be asked when examining
dried blood - Is it blood?
- What species did it originate?
- If human, can it be individualized?
15Color tests
- Preliminary tests to determine if a stain is
blood - Benzidine most common for years
- Known carcinogen - now discontinued
- Phenolphthalein also known as Kastle-Meyer
- Replaced benzidine
- Both cause a deep pink reaction
- Caution some vegetables (potatoes and
horseradish) react with Kastle-Meyer - Not usually at a crime scene so not a real problem
16Color test continued
- Hemastix
- Urine strip to test for blood in urine
- Useful for field testing
- Moisten with distilled water
- Contact with blood stain will cause a green color
17Luminol
- Produces light in presence of blood
- Stains produce faint blue light called
luminescence - Good for screening large areas for blood
- Extremely sensitive
- Detect blood diluted 300,000 times
- Does not interfere with DNA testing
18Microcrystalline tests
- 2 most popular tests
- Takayama
- Teichmann
- Addition of specific chemicals to blood causes
formation of crystals - Far less sensitive
- More susceptible to interfering with contaminants
19Precipitin test
- Determines if the blood is human or nonhuman
- When animals are injected with human blood
- They make antibodies against human blood
- Get human antiserum by bleeding the animal
- Isolate the blood serum
20Precipitin test continued
- Antiserum for any animal can be made
- Dogs, cats, deer, etc
- The blood and antiserum are placed in a capillary
tube - If there is a reaction
- A cloudy ring or band forms where the two meet
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22Gel diffusion and electrophoretic method
- Another method of determining species
- Antibodies and antigen diffuse toward each other
on a gel plate - Gel plate made of agar
- Very sensitive need very small amount
- 5-15 year old samples give positive result
- 4,000-5,000 yr old mummies also give positive
result - Electrophoretic method introduces an electrical
potential to the gel
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24Bloodstain patterns
- Useful for reconstruction and interpreting the
crime - Location, distribution and appearance
- Very experienced investigator performs tests on
similar surfaces in lab
25Bloodstain patterns continued
- Things to consider
- Surface texture
- Harder and less porous a surface the less spatter
occurs - Direction of travel
- Pointed end faces the direction of travel
- Impact angle
- 90 gives circular drop
- As angle decreases the drops elongate
- Origin of spatter
- Lines of the long axis converge at the origin
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27Heredity
- Genes microscopic units of hereditary material
http//wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/3801/389
2550/DNACD_mod02-1-12.swf - Genes determine characteristics of an individual
- Chromosomes genetic structures where genes are
found - Made of DNA and proteins
- Found in the nucleus of every cell
- Somatic human cells have 46 or 23 pairs
- Human gamete cells have 23
28Heredity continued
- Gametes come together in fertilization
- Zygote sperm egg
- X-chromosome - female
- Y-chromosome - male
- Sperm determines the sex of the child
29Alleles
- Genes come together in pairs known as alleles
- 1 from mom and 1 from dad
- They are at the same location on the chromosomes
- Locus
- Homozygous
- When an individual receives 2 of the same alleles
- Heterozygous
- When an individual receives 2 different alleles
30Alleles continued
- Dominant allele
- This is the characteristic that is dominant over
others - Type A or B blood, Brown eyes, Brown hair, No
Cleft, and so forth - Recessive allele
- This is the characteristic that is only seen when
both are recessive - Type O blood, blue/green eyes, blond/red hair,
cleft, and so forth - Codominance
- This is when 2 different dominant alleles are
present - Type AB blood
31Phenotype and genotype
- Phenotype
- What you see -
- Hair, size of nose, dimples, freckles, etc
- Genotype
- Actual genes (alleles) that one receives -
- AO blood, BO blood, Brown/blue eyes, Brown/blond
hair
32Paternity testing
- Genotyping blood has no relevance in criminal
investigations - Relevant for paternity testing
- Blood of offspring is compared to the parents
- Probability established
33Characteristics of semen
- Semen commonly found in sexual assault cases
- 2-step process
- Locate the stains
- Identify the individual
34Testing for seminal stains
- Stains on fabric are often visible unless
- Fabric has been washed
- Minute quantities
- Best to perform a color test
- Acid phosphatase test
35Acid Phosphatase Test
- Acid phosphatase is an enzyme secreted by the
prostate into seminal fluid - 400 times concentration
- Reacts with sodium naphthylphosphate and Fast
Blue B dye - 4-methyl umbelliferyl phosphate (MUP) and semen
fluoresces under UV light
36Process of testing
- Filter paper is moisten
- Wiped over the fabric
- Add 1-2 drops of sodium test and blue dye
- Positive result produces purple color
- Less than 30 seconds is strong positive
37Process of testing continued
- Large garment can be pressed against large
moistened filter paper - Paper then sprayed with MUP
- Positive results give fluoresces
- Caution
- Cauliflower, watermelon, fungi, contraceptive
creams and vaginal fluid give positive results
38Microscopic examination of semen
- Identified by spermatozoa
- Thin elongated cells with a head and flagellum
(tail) - Easily located when a stain is emerged in water
- Rapidly stir the liquid to transfer the
spermatazoa in the water - A drop of water mix is dried on a slide
- Then stained and viewed at 400X
39Microscopic examination of semen continued
- Normal males release 250-600 million spermatozoa
- Easy to locate on the slide
- Difficult situations
- Oligospermia
- Abnormally low sperm count
- Aspermia
- No sperm
- These individuals are more common due to
vasectomies
40Prostate specific antigen (PSA)
- Used for stains that are believed to be semen but
have no detectable spermatozoa - 1970s discovery of p30
- Prostate specific antigen
- Unique to seminal plasma
- When injected into rabbits they produce
polyclonal antibodies
41PSA continued
- The PSA test is done just like gel diffusion
- Precipitation line in the middle is a positive
result - Monoclonal antibody test can also be performed on
stains - The antibody-antigen reaction occurs on a porous
membrane - Colored line is a positive
- 100x more sensitive
42Collection of rape evidence
- Seminal material is very important in rape cases
- Absence of fluid does not mean a rape did not
occur - Bruises, blood, hair, and fibers tend to confirm
a violent attack - All outer and undergarments are removed carefully
- Placed in separate paper bags
43Proper disrobing procedures
- Lay a clean sheet on the floor and a clean paper
over it - Victim removes shoes then stands on the paper
- Collects loose evidence that falls as the victim
disrobes - Take each item of clothing as it is removed
- Avoid cross-contamination
- Fold paper carefully to keep fallen evidence
44Other evidence
- Bedding and objects used during the assault need
to be submitted to the lab - Never fold through a stain
- Cut out the stain when a object cant be
transported - Submit another sample that is not stained as a
reference
45Victim
- Medical examination should be done as soon as
possible - Evidence to be collected
- Pubic combings
- Pubic hair
- External genital dry-skin areas
- Vaginal swabs and smear
- 2 swabs
- 2 microscope slides
46Victim continued
- Cervix swabs - 2
- Rectal swabs and smear - only when warrented
- Oral swabs and smear - oral genital contact only
- Head hairs - 5 minimum
- Blood sample - 7 mls
- Fingernail scrapings - one paper per hand
- All clothing
- Urine specimen - 30 mls or more
47Suspect evidence collection
- All clothing
- Pubic hair combings
- Pulled hair and pubic hair
- Penile swab - 24 hrs of the assault
- Blood sample or buccal swab