28 research outputs found
Ancestry Analysis in the 11-M Madrid Bomb Attack Investigation
The 11-M Madrid commuter train bombings of 2004 constituted the second biggest terrorist attack to occur in Europe after
Lockerbie, while the subsequent investigation became the most complex and wide-ranging forensic case in Spain. Standard
short tandem repeat (STR) profiling of 600 exhibits left certain key incriminatory samples unmatched to any of the
apprehended suspects. A judicial order to perform analyses of unmatched samples to differentiate European and North
African ancestry became a critical part of the investigation and was instigated to help refine the search for further suspects.
Although mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and Y-chromosome markers routinely demonstrate informative geographic
differentiation, the populations compared in this analysis were known to show a proportion of shared mtDNA and Y
haplotypes as a result of recent gene-flow across the western Mediterranean, while any two loci can be unrepresentative of
the ancestry of an individual as a whole. We based our principal analysis on a validated 34plex autosomal ancestryinformative-marker single nucleotide polymorphism (AIM-SNP) assay to make an assignment of ancestry for DNA from
seven unmatched case samples including a handprint from a bag containing undetonated explosives together with
personal items recovered from various locations in Madrid associated with the suspects. To assess marker informativeness
before genotyping, we predicted the probable classification success for the 34plex assay with standard error estimators for a
naı¨ve Bayesian classifier using Moroccan and Spanish training sets (each n = 48). Once misclassification error was found to
be sufficiently low, genotyping yielded seven near-complete profiles (33 of 34 AIM-SNPs) that in four cases gave
probabilities providing a clear assignment of ancestry. One of the suspects predicted to be North African by AIM-SNP
analysis of DNA from a toothbrush was identified late in the investigation as Algerian in origin. The results achieved illustrate
the benefit of adding specialized marker sets to provide enhanced scope and power to an already highly effective system of
DNA analysis for forensic identification.European Commission GROWTH program, SNPforID project, contract G6RD-CT-2002-00844 to CP. Xunta de Galicia, Spain: Fund PGIDTIT06PXIB228195PR and Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia, Spain: project BIO2006-06178 to MVL. Fundación de Investigación Médica Mutua Madrileña, Spain: 2006/CL370 and 2008/CL444 to AS. Continued development of the work and its application to forensic analysis is being funded by Allelyus, Santiago de Compostela, SpainS
Uniparental markers of contemporary Italian population reveals details on its pre-Roman heritage.
BACKGROUND: According to archaeological records and historical documentation, Italy has been a melting point for populations of different geographical and ethnic matrices. Although Italy has been a favorite subject for numerous population genetic studies, genetic patterns have never been analyzed comprehensively, including uniparental and autosomal markers throughout the country.
METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A total of 583 individuals were sampled from across the Italian Peninsula, from ten distant (if homogeneous by language) ethnic communities--and from two linguistic isolates (Ladins, Grecani Salentini). All samples were first typed for the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region and selected coding region SNPs (mtSNPs). This data was pooled for analysis with 3,778 mtDNA control-region profiles collected from the literature. Secondly, a set of Y-chromosome SNPs and STRs were also analyzed in 479 individuals together with a panel of autosomal ancestry informative markers (AIMs) from 441 samples. The resulting genetic record reveals clines of genetic frequencies laid according to the latitude slant along continental Italy--probably generated by demographical events dating back to the Neolithic. The Ladins showed distinctive, if more recent structure. The Neolithic contribution was estimated for the Y-chromosome as 14.5% and for mtDNA as 10.5%. Y-chromosome data showed larger differentiation between North, Center and South than mtDNA. AIMs detected a minor sub-Saharan component; this is however higher than for other European non-Mediterranean populations. The same signal of sub-Saharan heritage was also evident in uniparental markers.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Italy shows patterns of molecular variation mirroring other European countries, although some heterogeneity exists based on different analysis and molecular markers. From North to South, Italy shows clinal patterns that were most likely modulated during Neolithic times