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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Amelogenin test: From forensics to quality control in clinical and biochemical genomics.
Ana CastellóOscar ColtellFrancesc FrancésJosé I. GonzálezJosé I. GonzálezDolores CorellaDolores CorellaO. PortolesFernando Verdúsubject
MaleQuality ControlSex Determination AnalysisConcordancemedia_common.quotation_subjectClinical BiochemistryMale sex determinationGenomicsBiologyBioinformaticsBiochemistrystomatognathic systemHumansQuality (business)media_commonRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicAmelogeninBiochemistry (medical)Reproducibility of ResultsGeneral MedicineDNAGenomicsForensic MedicineDNA extractionTest (assessment)MicrosatelliteElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelFemaleAmelogeninDatabases Nucleic Aciddescription
Abstract Background The increasing number of samples from the biomedical genetic studies and the number of centers participating in the same involves increasing risk of mistakes in the different sample handling stages. We have evaluated the usefulness of the amelogenin test for quality control in sample identification. Methods Amelogenin test (frequently used in forensics) was undertaken on 1224 individuals participating in a biomedical study. Concordance between referred sex in the database and amelogenin test was estimated. Additional sex-error genetic detecting systems were developed. Results The overall concordance rate was 99.84% (1222/1224). Two samples showed a female amelogenin test outcome, being codified as males in the database. The first, after checking sex-specific biochemical and clinical profile data was found to be due to a codification error in the database. In the second, after checking the database, no apparent error was discovered because a correct male profile was found. False negatives in amelogenin male sex determination were discarded by additional tests, and feminine sex was confirmed. A sample labeling error was revealed after a new DNA extraction. Conclusion The amelogenin test is a useful quality control tool for detecting sex-identification errors in large genomic studies, and can contribute to increase its validity.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2007-11-01 | Clinica chimica acta; international journal of clinical chemistry |