Back to Search Start Over

Collaborative EDNAP exercise on the IrisPlex system for DNA-based prediction of human eye colour.

Authors :
Chaitanya L
Walsh S
Andersen JD
Ansell R
Ballantyne K
Ballard D
Banemann R
Bauer CM
Bento AM
Brisighelli F
Capal T
Clarisse L
Gross TE
Haas C
Hoff-Olsen P
Hollard C
Keyser C
Kiesler KM
Kohler P
Kupiec T
Linacre A
Minawi A
Morling N
Nilsson H
Norén L
Ottens R
Palo JU
Parson W
Pascali VL
Phillips C
Porto MJ
Sajantila A
Schneider PM
Sijen T
Söchtig J
Syndercombe-Court D
Tillmar A
Turanska M
Vallone PM
Zatkalíková L
Zidkova A
Branicki W
Kayser M
Source :
Forensic science international. Genetics [Forensic Sci Int Genet] 2014 Jul; Vol. 11, pp. 241-51. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Apr 21.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The IrisPlex system is a DNA-based test system for the prediction of human eye colour from biological samples and consists of a single forensically validated multiplex genotyping assay together with a statistical prediction model that is based on genotypes and phenotypes from thousands of individuals. IrisPlex predicts blue and brown human eye colour with, on average, >94% precision accuracy using six of the currently most eye colour informative single nucleotide polymorphisms (HERC2 rs12913832, OCA2 rs1800407, SLC24A4 rs12896399, SLC45A2 (MATP) rs16891982, TYR rs1393350, and IRF4 rs12203592) according to a previous study, while the accuracy in predicting non-blue and non-brown eye colours is considerably lower. In an effort to vigorously assess the IrisPlex system at the international level, testing was performed by 21 laboratories in the context of a collaborative exercise divided into three tasks and organised by the European DNA Profiling (EDNAP) Group of the International Society of Forensic Genetics (ISFG). Task 1 involved the assessment of 10 blood and saliva samples provided on FTA cards by the organising laboratory together with eye colour phenotypes; 99.4% of the genotypes were correctly reported and 99% of the eye colour phenotypes were correctly predicted. Task 2 involved the assessment of 5 DNA samples extracted by the host laboratory from simulated casework samples, artificially degraded, and provided to the participants in varying DNA concentrations. For this task, 98.7% of the genotypes were correctly determined and 96.2% of eye colour phenotypes were correctly inferred. For Tasks 1 and 2 together, 99.2% (1875) of the 1890 genotypes were correctly generated and of the 15 (0.8%) incorrect genotype calls, only 2 (0.1%) resulted in incorrect eye colour phenotypes. The voluntary Task 3 involved participants choosing their own test subjects for IrisPlex genotyping and eye colour phenotype inference, while eye photographs were provided to the organising laboratory and judged; 96% of the eye colour phenotypes were inferred correctly across 100 samples and 19 laboratories. The high success rates in genotyping and eye colour phenotyping clearly demonstrate the reproducibility and the robustness of the IrisPlex assay as well as the accuracy of the IrisPlex model to predict blue and brown eye colour from DNA. Additionally, this study demonstrates the ease with which the IrisPlex system is implementable and applicable across forensic laboratories around the world with varying pre-existing experiences.<br /> (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1878-0326
Volume :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Forensic science international. Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24880832
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fsigen.2014.04.006