Determination of AB0 Blood Group System from Degraded Blood Stains on
Serological and Molecular Genetic Level
Zachová M.1, Zelený M.2, Pexa T.2, Mazura I.1, Hirt M.2
1Katedra antropologie a genetiky člověka, Přírodovědecká fakulta Karlovy univerzity v Praze, Česká republika2Ústav soudního lékařství, Fakultní nemocnice u sv. Anny v Brně, Česká republika |
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Summary:
The AB0 blood group system typing remains one of the basic laboratory tasks in a forensic practice.
However, problems arise when the analysed samples are seriously degraded.
We took blood samples from six volunteers (three men, three women) and made blood stains on
pieces of sterile cotton cloth. Blood stains were incubated at three different temperatures (22 °C,
37 °C, 56 °C) for various periods of time (1 day, 1 week, 14 days, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1
year). For blood stains degraded at 22 °C we also analysed the samples after 3.5 hours of incubation.
Moreover, we tried to determine the AB0 blood group system after thermal degradation at
high temperature, accurately at 200 °C for 10 min. For the AB0 blood group system typing a Polymerase
Chain Reaction method was used to amplify glycosyltransferase gene, when DNA had
been isolated from artificially created blood stains, followed by their subsequent artificial thermal
degradation. For serological AB0 typing the mixed agglutination and the Therkelsen method
were used.
The DNA analysis seemed to solve problems with seriously degraded blood stains but we found
out that classical serological methods were even better in some cases.
Key words:
AB0 system – DNA analysis – glycosyltransferase – mixed agglutination – Therkelsen
method
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