The Open Forensic Science Journal

2013, 6 : 12-19
Published online 2013 October 31. DOI: 10.2174/1874402801306010012
Publisher ID: TOFORSJ-6-12

Impact of Allogrooming in Domestic Cats (Felis silvestris catus) on Mitochondrial DNA Profiling of Shed Hairs

Robert A. Grahn , Tina I-T Huang and Leslie A. Lyons
980 Old Davis Rd, Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California – Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA.

ABSTRACT

Allogrooming is a normal behavior for socially bonded cats. Cat hairs may have epithelial cells on the shaft from at least two cat contributors, the host (groomee) and the donor (groomer). To determine the likelihood of obtaining a mixture or incorrect DNA profile in cat hairs, feline mtDNA control region from hairs of allogrooming cats was isolated and analyzed by direct sequencing. Two DNA extraction methods were tested; hair washes and complete digestion of hairs. For five allogrooming pairs with different mitotypes, thirteen of the 126 sequences (10.3%) matched the mitotype of the groomer, not the groomee. Forty-three sequences (34.13%) suggested the presence of both mitotypes, groomer and groomee. Approximately 2.4% of mtDNA sequences appeared heteroplasmic at mitotype defining sites. Heteroplasmy was not observed in 157 control sequences. Mitotypes from the groomer was 11-fold more difficult to obtain from hairs that were completely digested before DNA isolation and was not observed in samples if the hairs were washed prior to digestion. Unlike contamination issues in human forensic cases, obtaining more than one mtDNA profile from a feline hair sample could narrow the pool of suspects since the implicated cat(s) would have to be within the same vicinity and have social contact.

Keywords:

Forensic science, control region, heteroplasmy.