U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Assessing three soil removal methods for environmental DNA analysis of mock forensic geology evidence

NCJ Number
307712
Journal
Journal of Forensic Sciences Dated: 2023
Author(s)
Teresa M. Tiedge; Kelly A. Meiklejohn
Date Published
2023
Annotation

The authors discuss their research methodology, materials, and results from their research study, with the goal of comparing three commonly used soil removal methods for removing soil from diverse mock evidence items to determine which was most appropriate for environmental DNA analysis.

Abstract

Soil is useful in criminal investigations as it is highly variable and readily transferred. Forensic geologists use several different techniques for the removal of soil from evidence prior to the analysis of inorganic components. There has been recent interest from the forensic science community to analyze environmental deoxyribonucleic acid (eDNA) associated with soil to augment existing forensic analyses. Notably however, limited research has been conducted to compare commonly used soil removal methods for downstream eDNA analysis. In this paper, the authors present their research study in which three soil removal methods were assessed: picking/scraping; sonication; and swabbing. Three mock evidence types (t-shirts, boot soles, and trowels) were sampled in triplicate with each removal method. Soil samples underwent DNA isolation, quantification, and amplification of four genomic barcode regions: 16S for bacteria, ITS1 for fungi, ITS2 for plants, and COI for arthropods. Amplicons were prepared into libraries for DNA sequencing on an Illumina® MiniSeq. DNA concentrations were highest in picked/scraped samples and were statistically significant compared with swabbed and sonicated samples. Amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) were identified, and removal methods had no impact on the recovery of the total number of target ASVs. Additionally, when assessing each sample in multidimensional space, picked/scraped samples tended to cluster separately from swabbed and sonicated samples. The soil core used a reference in this study also clustered with the picked/scraped samples, indicating that these samples may be more reflective of the communities collected from soil cores. Based on these data, the authors identified that picking/scraping is an acceptable soil removal method for eDNA analysis. Publisher Abstract Provided