Biomek-3000 and GenPlex SNP Genotyping in Forensic Genetics
Michael Stangegaard, Carmen Tomàs, Anders J. Hansen, Rune Frank-Hansen, Claus Børsting, Niels Morling
- Year
- 2008
- Citations
- 9
Abstract
Single nucleotide polymorphism genotyping provides a supplement for conventional short tandem repeats-based kits currently used for human identification. GenPlex (Applied Biosystems (AB), Foster City, CA) is an SNP-genotyping kit based on a multiplex of 48 informative, autosomal SNPs from the SNP forID Consortium. Our objective was to setup, implement, and validate a small and affordable automated liquid-handling robot for forensic casework samples (buccal swaps on FTA-paper and Qiagen purified blood). The reaction scheme consisted of numerous steps and was cumbersome to perform consistently manually. Automation was accomplished with a Biomek-3000 (Beckmann Coulter) laboratory-automated workstation using five in-house-developed methods. All methods allowed the user to select the number of subsequent injections to the capillary electrophoresis instrument (ABI 3130 xl, AB) enabling processing of both partial and full plates. A total of 286 samples were analyzed in duplicates with the GenPlex reaction using the Biomek-3000. The results were compared with those obtained from the same samples using the SNaPshot(AB) single-base extension system. Full concordance of the results was obtained in all but one sample. The results demonstrate that the Biomek-3000 can perform a series of complex reactions leading to highly consistent forensic genetic SNP-typing results.
Keywords
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