Schulz Iris, Schneider Peter M, Olek Klaus, Rothschild Markus A, Tsokos Michael
Institute of Legal Medicine, University of Cologne, Melatengürtel 60-62, 50823, Cologne, Germany,
Forensic Sci Med Pathol. 2006 Jun;2(2):95-101. doi: 10.1385/FSMP:2:2:95.
Postmortem animal interference may be confused at first sight with injuries of vital origin, thus arousing suspicion of external violence preceding death. A reliable classification of the origin of such doubtful injuries is of crucial importance, a fact that is especially true for the investigation of suspected homicide and/or mammade body mutilation after death. In forensic pathology, the identification of injuries as caused by animals postmortem and the classification of a particular species as responsible for a specific injury pattern under question is usually done by forensic pathologists with vast practical experience and special knowledge of the appearance and morphology of tooth marks of carnivores and rodents, respectively. However, a molecular biological investigation of such wounds could provide genetic evidence that an injury pattern present on a corpse was truly caused postmortem by animal interference and thus support the pathologist's expertise. For this purpose, we developed a panel of small species-specific short-tandem repeat systems (<150 bp) for animals typically involved in postmortem scavenging of human remains, such as dogs and cats as well as wild-living rodents (mice and rats) having possible access to death scenes inside apartments or buildings. A specific and sensitive cross-species multiplex polymerase chain reaction was then established including the species-specific animal markers, thus enabling the genetic identification of wounds caused postmortem by different animals on human remains.
尸体解剖时动物造成的干扰乍一看可能会与致命伤混淆,从而引发对死亡前外部暴力的怀疑。对这类可疑损伤的来源进行可靠分类至关重要,这一事实在对疑似杀人及/或死后尸体毁损的调查中尤为明显。在法医病理学中,确定损伤是死后由动物造成的,并将特定物种认定为造成特定可疑损伤模式的原因,通常由具有丰富实践经验以及分别对食肉动物和啮齿动物牙印外观和形态有专门知识的法医病理学家来完成。然而,对此类伤口进行分子生物学调查可以提供基因证据,证明尸体上出现的损伤模式确实是死后动物干扰造成的,从而支持病理学家的专业判断。为此,我们针对通常参与人类遗体死后 scavenging 的动物开发了一组小的物种特异性短串联重复序列系统(<150 bp)(这里 scavenging 可能有“啃食、破坏等意思,根据语境猜测,未找到完全准确对应中文,暂保留英文),比如狗、猫以及可能进入公寓或建筑物内死亡现场的野生啮齿动物(小鼠和大鼠)。随后建立了一种特异性和敏感性高的跨物种多重聚合酶链反应,包括物种特异性动物标记物,从而能够对人类遗体上不同动物死后造成的伤口进行基因鉴定。