Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations

The use of 21 autosomal STRs loci for human identification has been gaining popularity throughout the world, attributable to its presumably better statistical discrimination ability. It has been indicated that the forensic statistical parameters for supporting the use of 21 STRs loci varied among th...

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Main Author: Mohd. Nor Azlan, Mohd. Nor Azlan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/81591/1/MohdNorAzlanMFS2019.pdf
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spelling my.utm.815912019-09-10T01:49:38Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/81591/ Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations Mohd. Nor Azlan, Mohd. Nor Azlan Q Science (General) The use of 21 autosomal STRs loci for human identification has been gaining popularity throughout the world, attributable to its presumably better statistical discrimination ability. It has been indicated that the forensic statistical parameters for supporting the use of 21 STRs loci varied among the different populations, and such data for the diverse Malaysian populations remain unreported, rendering doubts in the court of law about its real ability for human identification for Malaysian population. Using the GlobalFilerTM Express PCR Amplification kit, the complete DNA profiles of 21 STRs loci from buccal swabs of convicted Malaysian criminal (n = 570; 190 each for Malays, Chinese and Indians) (2016 – 2017) were analysed for their allele frequencies, exact test of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, observed and expected heterozygosity, power of discrimination, power of exclusion, match probability and polymorphism information content. Being the most informative locus, SE33 demonstrated the highest power of discrimination and power of exclusion, indicating it usefulness to discriminate individuals. In contrast, TPOX had the lowest power of discrimination and power of exclusion, as well as being the less informative genetic locus for all Malaysian population studied here. The probabilities that two individuals would share the same DNA profiles among the Malaysian Malays, Chinese and Indians, as well as in general Malaysian population were 1.3713 x 10-25, 2.8822 x 10-25, 7.5668 x 10-26 and 1.0385 x 10-26, respectively. The results obtained here were found comparable with similar studies reported in other populations, hence, its robustness for forensic human identification among the Malaysian populations is therefore, statistically supported. Phylogenetic analysis was performed to determine the genetic relationship of the Malaysian population with other Asian populations. 2019 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/81591/1/MohdNorAzlanMFS2019.pdf Mohd. Nor Azlan, Mohd. Nor Azlan (2019) Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations. Masters thesis, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia. http://dms.library.utm.my:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:124999
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
language English
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Mohd. Nor Azlan, Mohd. Nor Azlan
Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations
description The use of 21 autosomal STRs loci for human identification has been gaining popularity throughout the world, attributable to its presumably better statistical discrimination ability. It has been indicated that the forensic statistical parameters for supporting the use of 21 STRs loci varied among the different populations, and such data for the diverse Malaysian populations remain unreported, rendering doubts in the court of law about its real ability for human identification for Malaysian population. Using the GlobalFilerTM Express PCR Amplification kit, the complete DNA profiles of 21 STRs loci from buccal swabs of convicted Malaysian criminal (n = 570; 190 each for Malays, Chinese and Indians) (2016 – 2017) were analysed for their allele frequencies, exact test of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, observed and expected heterozygosity, power of discrimination, power of exclusion, match probability and polymorphism information content. Being the most informative locus, SE33 demonstrated the highest power of discrimination and power of exclusion, indicating it usefulness to discriminate individuals. In contrast, TPOX had the lowest power of discrimination and power of exclusion, as well as being the less informative genetic locus for all Malaysian population studied here. The probabilities that two individuals would share the same DNA profiles among the Malaysian Malays, Chinese and Indians, as well as in general Malaysian population were 1.3713 x 10-25, 2.8822 x 10-25, 7.5668 x 10-26 and 1.0385 x 10-26, respectively. The results obtained here were found comparable with similar studies reported in other populations, hence, its robustness for forensic human identification among the Malaysian populations is therefore, statistically supported. Phylogenetic analysis was performed to determine the genetic relationship of the Malaysian population with other Asian populations.
format Thesis
author Mohd. Nor Azlan, Mohd. Nor Azlan
author_facet Mohd. Nor Azlan, Mohd. Nor Azlan
author_sort Mohd. Nor Azlan, Mohd. Nor Azlan
title Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations
title_short Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations
title_full Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations
title_fullStr Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations
title_full_unstemmed Statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in Malaysian populations
title_sort statistical evidence to support the utilization of 21 autosomal short tandem repeats loci for human identification in malaysian populations
publishDate 2019
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/81591/1/MohdNorAzlanMFS2019.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/81591/
http://dms.library.utm.my:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:124999
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score 13.160551