4.5 Article

Assessing Single-Source Reproducibility of Human Head Hair Peptide Profiling from Different Regions of the Scalp

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ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2020.102396

关键词

Hair shaft; microscopical hair comparison; liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS); non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (nsSNPs); genetically variant peptide (GVP); single amino acid polymorphism (SAP)

资金

  1. NIH [S10 OD 019938]
  2. US Department of Energy
  3. FBI

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Peptide profiling technique is developed for inferring SNPs in hair shaft proteins, but further work is required before it can be considered for forensic comparisons.
Neither microscopical hair comparisons nor mitochondrial DNA sequencing alone, or together, constitutes a basis for personal identification. Due to these limitations, a complementary technique to compare questioned and known hair shafts was investigated. Recently, scientists from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's Forensic Science Center and other collaborators developed a peptide profiling technique, which can infer non synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) preserved in hair shaft proteins as single amino acid polymorphisms (SAPs). In this study, peptide profiling was evaluated to determine if it can meet forensic expectations when samples are in limited quantities with the possibility that hair samples collected from different areas of a single donor's scalp (i.e., single source) might not exhibit the same SAP profile. The average dissimilarity, percent differences in SAP profiles within each source, ranged from 0% difference to 29%. This pilot study suggests that more work is needed before peptide profiling of hair can be considered for forensic comparisons.

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