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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer Templeton is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer Templeton.


BioTechniques | 2014

DNA profiles from fingermarks

Jennifer Templeton; Adrian Linacre

Criminal investigations would be considerably improved if DNA profiles could be routinely generated from single fingermarks. Here we report a direct DNA profiling method that was able to generate interpretable profiles from 71% of 170 fingermarks. The data are based on fingermarks from all 5 digits of 34 individuals. DNA was obtained from the fingermarks using a swab moistened with Triton-X, and the fibers were added directly to one of two commercial DNA profiling kits. All profiles were obtained without increasing the number of amplification cycles; therefore, our method is ideally suited for adoption by the forensic science community. We indicate the use of the technique in a criminal case in which a DNA profile was generated from a fingermark on tape that was wrapped around a drug seizure. Our direct DNA profiling approach is rapid and able to generate profiles from touched items when current forensic practices have little chance of success.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2015

Direct PCR Improves the Recovery of DNA from Various Substrates

Jennifer Templeton; Duncan Taylor; Oliva Handt; Pawel Skuza; Adrian Linacre

This study reports on the comparison of a standard extraction process with the direct PCR approach of processing low‐level DNA swabs typical in forensic investigations. Varying concentrations of control DNA were deposited onto three commonly encountered substrates, brass, plastic, and glass, left to dry, and swabbed using premoistened DNA‐free nylon FLOQswabs™. Swabs (n = 90) were either processed using the DNA IQ™ kit or, for direct PCR, swab fibers (~2 mm2) were added directly to the PCR with no prior extraction. A significant increase in the height of the alleles (p < 0.005) was observed when using the direct PCR approach over the extraction methodology when controlling for surface type and mass of DNA deposited. The findings indicate the potential use of direct PCR for increasing the PCR product obtained from low‐template DNA samples in addition to minimizing contamination and saving resources.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Mitochondrial Genome Sequencing in Mesolithic North East Europe Unearths a New Sub-Clade within the Broadly Distributed Human Haplogroup C1

Clio Der Sarkissian; Paul Brotherton; Oleg Balanovsky; Jennifer Templeton; Bastien Llamas; Julien Soubrier; Vyacheslav Moiseyev; Valery Khartanovich; Alan Cooper; Wolfgang Haak

The human mitochondrial haplogroup C1 has a broad global distribution but is extremely rare in Europe today. Recent ancient DNA evidence has demonstrated its presence in European Mesolithic individuals. Three individuals from the 7,500 year old Mesolithic site of Yuzhnyy Oleni Ostrov, Western Russia, could be assigned to haplogroup C1 based on mitochondrial hypervariable region I sequences. However, hypervariable region I data alone could not provide enough resolution to establish the phylogenetic relationship of these Mesolithic haplotypes with haplogroup C1 mitochondrial DNA sequences found today in populations of Europe, Asia and the Americas. In order to obtain high-resolution data and shed light on the origin of this European Mesolithic C1 haplotype, we target-enriched and sequenced the complete mitochondrial genome of one Yuzhnyy Oleni Ostrov C1 individual. The updated phylogeny of C1 haplogroups indicated that the Yuzhnyy Oleni Ostrov haplotype represents a new distinct clade, provisionally coined “C1f”. We show that all three C1 carriers of Yuzhnyy Oleni Ostrov belong to this clade. No haplotype closely related to the C1f sequence could be found in the large current database of ancient and present-day mitochondrial genomes. Hence, we have discovered past human mitochondrial diversity that has not been observed in modern-day populations so far. The lack of positive matches in modern populations may be explained by under-sampling of rare modern C1 carriers or by demographic processes, population extinction or replacement, that may have impacted on populations of Northeast Europe since prehistoric times.


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2015

Forensic ancestry analysis with two capillary electrophoresis ancestry informative marker (AIM) panels: Results of a collaborative EDNAP exercise

Carla Santos; M. Fondevila; David Ballard; R. Banemann; A.M. Bento; Claus Børsting; Wojciech Branicki; Francesca Brisighelli; M. Burrington; Tomas Capal; Lakshmi Chaitanya; Runa Daniel; V. Decroyer; R. England; Katherine Butler Gettings; T.E. Gross; Cordula Haas; Joyce Harteveld; P. Hoff-Olsen; A. Hoffmann; Manfred Kayser; P. Kohler; Adrian Linacre; M. Mayr-Eduardoff; C. McGovern; Niels Morling; Geraldine O’Donnell; Walther Parson; V. L. Pascali; M.J. Porto

There is increasing interest in forensic ancestry tests, which are part of a growing number of DNA analyses that can enhance routine profiling by obtaining additional genetic information about unidentified DNA donors. Nearly all ancestry tests use single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), but these currently rely on SNaPshot single base extension chemistry that can fail to detect mixed DNA. Insertion-deletion polymorphism (Indel) tests have been developed using dye-labeled primers that allow direct capillary electrophoresis detection of PCR products (PCR-to-CE). PCR-to-CE maintains the direct relationship between input DNA and signal strength as each marker is detected with a single dye, so mixed DNA is more reliably detected. We report the results of a collaborative inter-laboratory exercise of 19 participants (15 from the EDNAP European DNA Profiling group) that assessed a 34-plex SNP test using SNaPshot and a 46-plex Indel test using PCR-to-CE. Laboratories were asked to type five samples with different ancestries and detect an additional mixed DNA sample. Statistical inference of ancestry was made by participants using the Snipper online Bayes analysis portal plus an optional PCA module that analyzes the genotype data alongside calculation of Bayes likelihood ratios. Exercise results indicated consistent genotyping performance from both tests, reaching a particularly high level of reliability for the Indel test. SNP genotyping gave 93.5% concordance (compared to the organizing laboratorys data) that rose to 97.3% excluding one laboratory with a large number of miscalled genotypes. Indel genotyping gave a higher concordance rate of 99.8% and a reduced no-call rate compared to SNP analysis. All participants detected the mixture from their Indel peak height data and successfully assigned the correct ancestry to the other samples using Snipper, with the exception of one laboratory with SNP miscalls that incorrectly assigned ancestry of two samples and did not obtain informative likelihood ratios for a third. Therefore, successful ancestry assignments were achieved by participants in 92 of 95 Snipper analyses. This exercise demonstrates that ancestry inference tests based on binary marker sets can be readily adopted by laboratories that already have well-established CE regimes in place. The Indel test proved to be easy to use and allowed all exercise participants to detect the DNA mixture as well as achieving complete and concordant profiles in nearly all cases. Lastly, two participants successfully ran parallel next-generation sequencing analyses (each using different systems) and achieved high levels of genotyping concordance using the exercise PCR primer mixes unmodified.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2015

Late Pleistocene Australian Marsupial DNA Clarifies the Affinities of Extinct Megafaunal Kangaroos and Wallabies

Bastien Llamas; Paul Brotherton; Kieren J. Mitchell; Jennifer Templeton; Vicki A. Thomson; Jessica L. Metcalf; Kyle N. Armstrong; Marta Kasper; Stephen M. Richards; Aaron B. Camens; Michael S. Y. Lee; Alan Cooper

Understanding the evolution of Australias extinct marsupial megafauna has been hindered by a relatively incomplete fossil record and convergent or highly specialized morphology, which confound phylogenetic analyses. Further, the harsh Australian climate and early date of most megafaunal extinctions (39-52 ka) means that the vast majority of fossil remains are unsuitable for ancient DNA analyses. Here, we apply cross-species DNA capture to fossils from relatively high latitude, high altitude caves in Tasmania. Using low-stringency hybridization and high-throughput sequencing, we were able to retrieve mitochondrial sequences from two extinct megafaunal macropodid species. The two specimens, Simosthenurus occidentalis (giant short-faced kangaroo) and Protemnodon anak (giant wallaby), have been radiocarbon dated to 46-50 and 40-45 ka, respectively. This is significantly older than any Australian fossil that has previously yielded DNA sequence information. Processing the raw sequence data from these samples posed a bioinformatic challenge due to the poor preservation of DNA. We explored several approaches in order to maximize the signal-to-noise ratio in retained sequencing reads. Our findings demonstrate the critical importance of adopting stringent processing criteria when distant outgroups are used as references for mapping highly fragmented DNA. Based on the most stringent nucleotide data sets (879 bp for S. occidentalis and 2,383 bp for P. anak), total-evidence phylogenetic analyses confirm that macropodids consist of three primary lineages: Sthenurines such as Simosthenurus (extinct short-faced kangaroos), the macropodines (all other wallabies and kangaroos), and the enigmatic living banded hare-wallaby Lagostrophus fasciatus (Lagostrophinae). Protemnodon emerges as a close relative of Macropus (large living kangaroos), a position not supported by recent morphological phylogenetic analyses.


Research and Reports in Forensic Medical Science | 2014

Forensic DNA profiling: state of the art

Adrian Linacre; Jennifer Templeton

(unported, v3.0) License. The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. Permissions beyond the scope of the License are administered by Dove Medical Press Limited. Information on how to request permission may be found at: http://www.dovepress.com/permissions.php Research and Reports in Forensic Medical Science 2014:4 25–36 Research and Reports in Forensic Medical Science Dovepress


Nature Communications | 2013

Neolithic mitochondrial haplogroup H genomes and the genetic origins of Europeans

Paul Brotherton; Wolfgang Haak; Jennifer Templeton; Guido Brandt; Julien Soubrier; Christina J. Adler; Stephen M. Richards; Clio Der Sarkissian; Robert Ganslmeier; Susanne Friederich; Veit Dresely; Mannis van Oven; Rosalie Kenyon; Mark B. Van der Hoek; Jonas Korlach; Khai Luong; Simon Y. W. Ho; Lluis Quintana-Murci; Doron M. Behar; Harald Meller; Kurt W. Alt; Alan Cooper


Investigative Genetics | 2013

DNA capture and next-generation sequencing can recover whole mitochondrial genomes from highly degraded samples for human identification

Jennifer Templeton; Paul Brotherton; Bastien Llamas; Julien Soubrier; Wolfgang Haak; Alan Cooper; Jeremy J. Austin


Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series | 2013

Genetic profiling from challenging samples: Direct PCR of touch DNA

Jennifer Templeton; Renée Ottens; Viviana Paradiso; Oliva Handt; Duncan Taylor; Adrian Linacre


Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series | 2013

Application of direct PCR in forensic casework

Renée Ottens; Jennifer Templeton; Viviana Paradiso; Duncan Taylor; Damien Abarno; Adrian Linacre

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Alan Cooper

University of Adelaide

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