4.3 Article

DNAc: A Clustering Method for Identifying Kinship Relations Between DNA Profiles Using a Novel Similarity Measure

Journal

JOURNAL OF FORENSIC SCIENCES
Volume 56, Issue -, Pages S17-S22

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2010.01614.x

Keywords

forensic science; DNA; microsatellite; kinship; clustering; similarity

Funding

  1. Fonds de la Recherche en Sante du Quebec (FRSQ)
  2. Fondation des etoiles
  3. Faculte de medecine et des sciences de la sante of Universite de Sherbrooke
  4. Centre de Recherche Clinique Etienne-Le Bel

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After decades of refinement, DNA testing methods have become essential tools in forensic sciences. They are essentially based on likelihood ratio test principle, which is utilized specifically, by using as prior knowledge the allele frequencies in the population, to confirm or refute a given kinship hypothesis made on two genotypes. This makes these methods ill suited when allele frequencies or kinship hypotheses are unavailable. In this paper, we introduce DNAc, a new clustering methodology for DNA testing based on a new similarity measure that allows an accurate retrieval of the degree of relatedness among two or more genotypes, without relying on kinship hypotheses or allele frequencies in the population. We used DNAc in analyzing microsatellite DNA sequences distributed among 12 genotypes from normal individuals from two distinct families. The results show that DNAc accurately determines kinship among genotypes and further gathers them in the appropriate kinship groups.

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