-Caveat Lector-

Science Daily, 12 Feb 99 -- Human Identity Reduced To A Bar Code

Canned peas, beans, and human beings all have something in common --
they can be identified with a bar code. It takes more than supermarket
science to see a human's bar code, however. The Department of Energy's
Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory and Miragen, a
biotechnology company, are developing a technique that can display a
"bar code" of antibodies that is unique for each person and may become
a powerful new tool for law enforcement. INEEL's chemical engineer Vicki
Thompson presented an overview of her work to date to the International
Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE). Her paper will be published in
the conference proceedings called Enabling Technologies for Law
Enforcement and Security in January. Miragen, based in Irvine,
California, has developed a technique called the Antibody Profile Assay
(AbPTM) that can identify an individual by a subset of normally
occurring antibodies present in his body. These antibodies, called
Individual Specific Autoantibodies (ISA's), are not affected by
medicines or illnesses, and with very few exceptions are stable across
a person's lifetime -- just like a fingerprint. The AbPTM technique
involves flushing a sample containing blood (or potentially other
bodily fluids) across a strip of paper lined with bands of specific
proteins that the ISA's can cling to. The paper is then rinsed with
reagents that stain the ISA's, and researchers are able to see which
ISA's an individual has. There is little sample preparation necessary,
and the results are in a permanent, easy-to-read format. The test can
even distinguish between identical twins -- something DNA testing
cannot. Until recently, Miragen has marketed the technique only for
medical and agricultural purposes, but researchers at the INEEL are
interested in developing this new technology for law enforcement. "The
test itself is very simple to do; the chemistry behind it is not," says
Thompson. Although she says she doesn't see this technique replacing DNA
 testing, it does offer several advantages: One, the test can be
prepared by someone with a high school education. Secondly, the fact
that this test does not require DNA material, only bodily fluids, gives
law enforcement a very powerful new method for proving someone was at a
crime scene. This could be very important in cases of alleged rape
where the suspect has had a vasectomy - there is no DNA in the fluid,
but there are antibodies. Also, results from the AbPTM assay are
available in around two hours whereas DNA tests can take anywhere from
24 hours to three weeks. The assay provides an additional method with
which law enforcement personnel can prove identity. This technique,
which costs an estimated $20 per test, is significantly cheaper than
DNA testing, which can range from $200 to $1,200 per test. Thompson is
partnering with Miragen through a cooperative research and development
agreement to test the technique's efficacy against the real-world
problems facing law enforcement. Recently, she provided blood samples
from 10 people to the Wyoming State Crime Laboratory. They agreed to
doctor blood samples to simulate crime scene challenges for Thompson
and her team. "They added gasoline to the blood samples, swabbed the
blood off of sidewalks, windshields, and cars, mixed the samples, and
even used animal blood," said Thompson. Surprisingly, animal blood is
often found at crime scenes, and the assay technique must distinguish
between human and animal blood, said Thompson. The Wyoming lab obtained
samples of blood from cats, dogs, sheep, coyotes -- even moose. "It's
not like you often find moose blood at crime scenes," says Thompson
with a laugh, "it was just what was easy for them to obtain." The
Wyoming Lab created a key of what was done to the samples (and who they
belonged to) and sent Thompson 422 sample puzzles to solve. Thompson
was able to correctly identify 91% of the samples. The assay technique
was less reliable with blood samples that had been exposed to
temperatures above 60ºC (140ºF) and samples contaminated with dirt. "The
blood samples just get too degraded at high temperatures," says
Thompson, "and we really don't understand what is happening with the
dirt." Thompson later scooped dirt from outside her lab and did several
new tests. "It seems to make a real difference in the samples mixed
with dirt if it is over 24 hours before we test them -- that is a lot
of time for microbes to work," she says. This is problematic because
microbes are abundant in soils, and not all crimes scenes are
discovered (and their evidence gathered) within 24 hours. Thompson also
decided to make the new test non-responsive to animal antibodies
completely. She changed the reagent wash composition so that only human
ISA's are stained and create a color band, while the animal antibodies
are ignored. A success rate of 91% is not good enough for the courts.
"We realized that the technique had to be made more sensitive," says
Thompson. With funding from the INEEL's discretionary research program,
Thompson is improving the test procedure. By using an additional wash
of reagents, she is able to build up more of the reagents that stain
the ISA's on the protein strip -- refining the distinct bands. In
1999, Thompson will test her new process against more simulated crime
scene situations, and work toward statistical proof that the bar code
is truly as unique to each person as a fingerprint. The validity of the
assay has to be statistically proven before the test results will be
widely used in court proceedings.

###
The Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory is operated
for the U.S. Department of Energy by Lockheed Martin Idaho Technologies
Company.

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