4.7 Article

Comprehensive coverage of human last meal components revealed by a forensic DNA metabarcoding approach

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-88418-x

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Funding

  1. University of Lausanne
  2. fellowship in Life Sciences (Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne)

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Stomach content analyses are a valuable tool in human forensic science to interpret perimortem events. DNA metabarcoding has the potential to increase sensitivity and taxonomic resolution in identifying food components. This pilot study applied DNA metabarcoding to assess plant and vertebrate components of human stomach content samples, showing promising perspectives for biomedical dietary surveys.
Stomach content analyses are a valuable tool in human forensic science to interpret perimortem events. While the identification of food components of plant and animal origin has traditionally been conducted by macro- and microscopical approaches in case of incomplete digestion, molecular methods provide the potential to increase sensitivity and taxonomic resolution. In particular, DNA metabarcoding (PCR-amplification and next generation sequencing of complex DNA mixtures) has seen a rapid growth in the field of wildlife ecology to assess species' diets from faecal and gastric samples. Despite clear advantages, molecular approaches have not yet been established in routine human forensics to investigate the last meal components of deceased persons. In this pilot study we applied for the first time a DNA metabarcoding approach to assess both plant and vertebrate components of 48 human stomach content samples taken during medicolegal autopsies. We obtained a final dataset with 34 vertebrate and 124 vegetal unique sequences, that were clustered to 9 and 33 operational taxonomic units (OTUs), respectively. Our results suggest that this approach can provide crucial information about circumstances preceding death, and open promising perspectives for biomedical dietary surveys based on digested food items found in the gastrointestinal tract.

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