Department of Forensic Science, College of Criminal Justice, Sam Houston State University, 1003 Bowers Blvd., Huntsville, TX, 77340-2525, USA.
Int J Legal Med. 2019 Nov;133(6):1721-1732. doi: 10.1007/s00414-019-02142-w. Epub 2019 Aug 23.
Marijuana (Cannabis sativa) is the most commonly used illicit drug in the USA. Despite its schedule I classification by the federal government, 33 states and the District of Columbia have legalized its use for medicinal or recreational purposes. This state-specific legalization has created a new problem for law enforcement: preventing and tracking the diversion of legally obtained Cannabis to states where it remains illegal. In addition, trafficking of the drug at the border with Mexico remains an issue for law enforcement agencies. C. sativa crops can be classified as marijuana (a drug containing the psychoactive chemical delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol) or hemp (the non-drug form of the plant). Differentiation between crop types is important for forensic purposes. In addition, investigation of trafficking routes into and within the USA requires genetic association of samples from different seizures, and determining where the crop originated could provide important leads. This project seeks to exploit sequence variations in C. sativa chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) to allow genetic determination of biogeographic origin, discrimination between marijuana and hemp, and association between cases for C. sativa samples. Due to the limited discriminatory ability of common barcoding markers, the authors sought to discover more informative polymorphic regions. By comparing published whole genome cpDNA sequences, 58 polymorphisms and seven hotspot regions were identified. Hemp samples from the USA and Canada, marijuana samples from Mexico and Chile, and medical marijuana samples from Chile were evaluated using two cpDNA hotspot regions, rpl32-trnL and trnS-trnG. Principal component analysis supported some differences between the groups based on their crop type and biogeographic origin.
大麻(Cannabis sativa)是美国最常用的非法药物。尽管联邦政府将其列为附表 I 类药物,但 33 个州和哥伦比亚特区已将其合法化用于医疗或娱乐目的。这种州特定的合法化给执法部门带来了一个新问题:防止和跟踪从合法获得的大麻流向仍属非法的州。此外,与墨西哥边境的毒品贩运仍然是执法机构的一个问题。C. sativa 作物可分为大麻(含有精神活性化学物质 delta-9-四氢大麻酚的药物)或麻(植物的非药物形式)。区分作物类型对于法医学目的很重要。此外,调查毒品进入美国和美国境内的贩运路线需要对来自不同缉获物的样本进行遗传关联,并确定作物的来源可以提供重要线索。本项目旨在利用 C. sativa 叶绿体 DNA (cpDNA)中的序列变异,允许对生物地理起源进行遗传确定,区分大麻和麻,以及对 C. sativa 样本进行关联。由于常见条形码标记的鉴别能力有限,作者试图发现更具信息量的多态性区域。通过比较已发表的全基因组 cpDNA 序列,确定了 58 个多态性和 7 个热点区域。使用两个 cpDNA 热点区域 rpl32-trnL 和 trnS-trnG 评估了来自美国和加拿大的麻类植物样本、来自墨西哥和智利的大麻样本以及来自智利的医用大麻样本。主成分分析支持基于作物类型和生物地理起源的组间的一些差异。