- Course Introduction
- 01: Evidence & DNA
- 02: Forensic Biology
- 03: DNA Extraction & Quantitation
- Quantitation
1. Walsh, P. S., D. A. Metzger, and R. Higuchi. 1991. Chelex® 100 as a medium for simple extraction of DNA for PCR-based typing from forensic material. Biotechniques 10 (4): 506–13.
2. Suenaga, E., and H. Nakamura. 2005. Evaluation of three methods for effective extraction of DNA from human hair. J Chromatography Biology Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci 820 (1): 137–41.
3. Vandenberg N., R. A. van Oorschot, and R. J. Mitchell. 1997. An evaluation of selected DNA extraction strategies for short tandem repeat typing. Electrophoresis 18 (9): 1624–6.
4. Sweet, D., M. Lorente, A. Valenzuela, J. A. Lorente, and J. C. Alvarez. 1996. Increasing DNA extraction yield from saliva stains with a modified Chelex method. Forensic Sci Int 83 (3): 167–77.
5. Willard, J.M., D.A. Lee, and M.M. Holland. 1998. Recovery of DNA for PCR amplification from blood and forensic samples using a chelating resin. Methods of Molecular Biology 98: 9-18.
6. Bio-Rad Laboratories. 2006. Chelex® 100 product insert.
http://www.bio-rad.com/webmaster/pdfs/9184_Chelex.PDF (Accessed September 6, 2007)
7. Hoff-Olsen, P., B. Mevag, E. Staalstrom, B. Hovde, T. Egeland, and B. Olaisen B. 1999. Extraction of DNA from decomposed human tissue: An evaluation of five extraction methods for short tandem repeat typing. Forensic Sci Int 105 (3): 171–83.
8. Greenspoon, S. A., M. A. Scarpetta, M. L. Drayton, and S. A. Turek. 1998. QIAamp spin columns as a method of DNA isolation for forensic casework. J Forensic Sci 43 (5): 1024–30.
9. Comey, C. T. 1994. DNA extraction strategies for amplified fragment length polymorphism analysis. J Forensic Sci 39 (5): 1254–69.
