KENNEDY, Katie, HEATON, Cameron, LANGENBURG, Glenn, COLE, Laura, CLARK, Tom, CLENCH, Malcolm R., SEARS, Vaughn, SEALEY, Mark, MCCOLM, Richard and FRANCESE, Simona (2020). Pre-validation of a MALDI MS proteomics-based method for the reliable detection of blood and blood provenance. Scientific Reports, 10 (1), p. 17087. [Article]
Documents
27395:559139
PDF
41598_2020_Article_74253.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
41598_2020_Article_74253.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (3MB) | Preview
27395:559138
PDF (Tables)
41598_2020_74253_MOESM1_ESM.pdf - Supplemental Material
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
41598_2020_74253_MOESM1_ESM.pdf - Supplemental Material
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (1MB) | Preview
Abstract
Abstract: The reliable identification of blood, as well as the determination of its origin (human or animal) is of great importance in a forensic investigation. Whilst presumptive tests are rapid and deployed in situ, their very nature requires confirmatory tests to be performed remotely. However, only serological tests can determine blood provenance. The present study improves on a previously devised Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionisation Mass Spectrometry (MALDI MS)—proteomics based method for the reliable detection of blood by enabling the determination of blood provenance. The overall protocol was developed to be more specific than presumptive tests and faster/easier than the gold standard liquid chromatography (LC) MS/MS analysis. This is considered a pre-validation study that has investigated stains and fingermarks made in blood, other biofluids and substances that can elicit a false-positive response to colorimetric or presumptive tests, in a blind fashion. Stains and marks were either untreated or enhanced with a range of presumptive tests. Human and animal blood were correctly discriminated from other biofluids and non-biofluid related matrices; animal species determination was also possible within the system investigated. The procedure is compatible with the prior application of presumptive tests. The refined strategy resulting from iterative improvements through a trial and error study of 56 samples was applied to a final set of 13 blind samples. This final study yielded 12/13 correct identifications with the 13th sample being correctly identified as animal blood but with no species attribution. This body of work will contribute towards the validation of MALDI MS based methods and deployment in violent crimes involving bloodshed.
More Information
Statistics
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
Metrics
Altmetric Badge
Dimensions Badge
Share
Actions (login required)
View Item |