Evaluation of diallelic STR markers with inter-population allelic database for their usefulness in paternity trios in the Central Indian population

Background Most of the forensic DNA laboratories have migrated to new generation STR kits of 6 dye chemistry with more than 20 autosomal STRs. The population-specific databases of such STR markers are lacking in many regions. Aim To evaluate the effect of the inter-population database in 100 paterni...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hirak Ranjan Dash (Author), Kamayani Vajpayee (Author), Radhika Agarwal (Author), Anubha Gang (Author), Ritesh Shukla (Author), Ankit Srivastava (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Taylor & Francis Group, 2021-11-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:Background Most of the forensic DNA laboratories have migrated to new generation STR kits of 6 dye chemistry with more than 20 autosomal STRs. The population-specific databases of such STR markers are lacking in many regions. Aim To evaluate the effect of the inter-population database in 100 paternity trios with no inconsistencies at 23 STRs. Subjects and methods 100 paternity trios were evaluated considering inter-population allelic frequency values for calculation of Combined Paternity Index (CPI) and Probability of Paternity (POP). Results No significant variation (p < 0.05) among the allele frequencies at the interpopulation level was observed. The number of obligate alleles and the likelihood of transferring obligate alleles from the putative father showed a positive correlation (p < 0.005) with Power of Discrimination (PD), Polymorphic Information Content (PIC), Power of Exclusion (PE), Paternity Index (PI), Observed and Expected Heterozygosity (Ho and He), and a statistically significant negative correlation (p < 0.005) with Matching Probability (Pm). The average Combined Paternity Index (CPI) and Probability of Paternity (POP) did not show any statistically significant difference (p < 0.05) at the interpopulation level. Conclusion The allelic database showed no effect on the CPI and POP in 100 paternity trios. This suggests no urgent need for using population-specific databases for statistical evaluation of paternity trios without inconsistencies.
Item Description:0301-4460
1464-5033
10.1080/03014460.2021.2014567