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1.
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine ; : 147-151, 2010.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-14398

ABSTRACT

The analysis of Y chromosome polymorphisms has become common place for the identification of male component in forensic cases. In male/female mixtures of many rape cases, Y-STRs are also very useful for the determination of contributors' number. During the analyses of 17 Y-STR haplotypes for forensic applications using the AmpFlSTR(R) Yfiler(TM) system, a number of null and duplicated alleles (40 out of 2144 subjects) were discovered. Interestingly, two haplotypes should focus the attention on forensic interpretation of Y-STR haplotype profiles, because multiple mutational events at various loci can be interpreted as a wrong mixed or allele drop-out profile.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Alleles , Haplotypes , Hypogonadism , Mitochondrial Diseases , Ophthalmoplegia , Rape , Y Chromosome
2.
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine ; : 68-71, 2008.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-17378

ABSTRACT

Y-STR haplotyping is a powerful forensic and anthropological tool for identifying male lineages. We used high-resolution Y-STR haplotyping to evaluate the possibility of an ancestral relationship between two individuals with the different surname. Of the 17 Y-STRs genotyped, 16 had identical alleles in two individuals, except for an unambiguously sporadic mutation (one-step mutation) at DYS385 locus. The common allele 11.1 (U3Ains) at DYS439 locus was also observed in these two individuals. Sequencing analysis of these alleles of two samples demonstrated an A insertion at base 3 upstream from the repeat region's first GATA motif. These findings suggested that two individuals were paternally related, even if male individuals live with different surname.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Alleles , Haplotypes
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