Laboratory of Genetic Identification, Department of Legal Medicine and Toxicology, Medical Faculty, University of Granada, Granada, Spain.
Pathobiology. 2012;79(5):228-38. doi: 10.1159/000334982. Epub 2012 Jun 21.
Human identification has made great strides over the past 2 decades due to the advent of DNA typing. Forensic DNA typing provides genetic data from a variety of materials and individuals, and is applied to many important issues that confront society. Part of the success of DNA typing is the generation of DNA databases to help identify missing persons and to develop investigative leads to assist law enforcement. DNA databases house DNA profiles from convicted felons (and in some jurisdictions arrestees), forensic evidence, human remains, and direct and family reference samples of missing persons. These databases are essential tools, which are becoming quite large (for example the US Database contains 10 million profiles). The scientific, governmental and private communities continue to work together to standardize genetic markers for more effective worldwide data sharing, to develop and validate robust DNA typing kits that contain the reagents necessary to type core identity genetic markers, to develop technologies that facilitate a number of analytical processes and to develop policies to make human identity testing more effective. Indeed, DNA typing is integral to resolving a number of serious criminal and civil concerns, such as solving missing person cases and identifying victims of mass disasters and children who may have been victims of human trafficking, and provides information for historical studies. As more refined capabilities are still required, novel approaches are being sought, such as genetic testing by next-generation sequencing, mass spectrometry, chip arrays and pyrosequencing. Single nucleotide polymorphisms offer the potential to analyze severely compromised biological samples, to determine the facial phenotype of decomposed human remains and to predict the bioancestry of individuals, a new focus in analyzing this type of markers.
由于 DNA 分型技术的出现,过去 20 年来,人类身份识别技术取得了长足的进步。法医 DNA 分型提供了来自各种材料和个体的遗传数据,并应用于许多社会面临的重要问题。DNA 分型成功的部分原因是生成 DNA 数据库,以帮助识别失踪人员并为执法提供调查线索。DNA 数据库存储了有犯罪记录者(在某些司法管辖区还包括被捕者)、法医证据、人类遗骸以及失踪人员的直接和家庭参考样本的 DNA 图谱。这些数据库是必不可少的工具,它们的规模越来越大(例如,美国数据库包含 1000 万个人的 DNA 图谱)。科学界、政府和私营部门继续合作,为更有效的全球数据共享标准化遗传标记,开发和验证包含必要试剂的强大 DNA 分型试剂盒,以开发有助于多种分析过程的技术,并制定政策以提高人类身份识别测试的效率。事实上,DNA 分型对于解决许多严重的刑事和民事问题至关重要,例如解决失踪人员案件,识别大规模灾难中的受害者和可能成为人口贩卖受害者的儿童,并为历史研究提供信息。随着对更精细能力的需求不断增加,人们正在寻求新的方法,例如下一代测序、质谱、芯片阵列和焦磷酸测序的基因检测。单核苷酸多态性提供了分析严重受损生物样本、确定分解人类遗骸的面部表型以及预测个体生物祖先的潜力,这是分析此类标记的一个新焦点。