S. Inturri
University of Turin
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Publication
Featured researches published by S. Inturri.
International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2008
Carlo Robino; F. Crobu; C. Di Gaetano; A. Bekada; S. Benhamamouch; Nicoletta Cerutti; Alberto Piazza; S. Inturri; Carlo Torre
The distribution of Y-chromosomal single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) haplogroups and short tandem repeat (STR) haplotypes was determined in a sample of 102 unrelated men of Arab origin from northwestern Algeria (Oran area). A total of nine different haplogroups were identified by a panel of 22 binary markers. The most common haplogroups observed in the Algerian population were E3b2 (45.1%) and J1 (22.5%). Y-STR typing by a 17-loci multiplex system allowed 93 haplotypes to be defined (88 were unique). Striking differences in the allele distribution and gene diversity of Y-STR markers between haplogroups could be found. In particular, intermediate alleles at locus DYS458 specifically characterized the haplotypes of individuals carrying haplogroup J1. All the intermediate alleles shared a common repeat sequence structure, supporting the hypothesis that the variant originated from a single mutational event.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2009
Cornelia Di Gaetano; Nicoletta Cerutti; F. Crobu; Carlo Robino; S. Inturri; Sarah Gino; Simonetta Guarrera; Peter A. Underhill; Roy King; Valentino Romano; Francesco Calì; Mauro Gasparini; Giuseppe Matullo; Alfredo Salerno; Carlo Torre; Alberto Piazza
The presence or absence of genetic heterogeneity in Sicily has long been debated. Through the analysis of the variation of Y-chromosome lineages, using the combination of haplogroups and short tandem repeats from several areas of Sicily, we show that traces of genetic flows occurred in the island, due to ancient Greek colonization and to northern African contributions, are still visible on the basis of the distribution of some lineages. The genetic contribution of Greek chromosomes to the Sicilian gene pool is estimated to be about 37% whereas the contribution of North African populations is estimated to be around 6%.In particular, the presence of a modal haplotype coming from the southern Balkan Peninsula and of its one-step derivates associated to E3b1a2-V13, supports a common genetic heritage between Sicilians and Greeks. The estimate of Time to Most Recent Common Ancestor is about 2380 years before present, which broadly agrees with the archaeological traces of the Greek classic era. The Eastern and Western part of Sicily appear to be significantly different by the χ2-analysis, although the extent of such differentiation is not very high according to an analysis of molecular variance. The presence of a high number of different haplogroups in the island makes its gene diversity to reach about 0.9. The general heterogeneous composition of haplogroups in our Sicilian data is similar to the patterns observed in other major islands of the Mediterranean, reflecting the complex histories of settlements in Sicily.
Forensic Science International-genetics | 2012
Michael Nothnagel; Reinhard Szibor; Oliver Vollrath; Christa Augustin; Jeanett Edelmann; Maria Geppert; Cíntia Alves; Leonor Gusmão; Marielle Vennemann; Yiping Hou; Uta-Dorothee Immel; S. Inturri; Haibo Luo; Sabine Lutz-Bonengel; Carlo Robino; Lutz Roewer; Burkhard Rolf; Juliane Sanft; Kyoung-Jin Shin; Jeong Eun Sim; Peter Wiegand; Christian Winkler; Michael Krawczak; Sandra Hering
A large number of short tandem repeat (STR) markers spanning the entire human X chromosome have been described and established for use in forensic genetic testing. Due to their particular mode of inheritance, X-STRs often allow easy and informative haplotyping in kinship analyses. Moreover, some X-STRs are known to be tightly linked so that, in combination, they constitute even more complex genetic markers than each STR taken individually. As a consequence, X-STRs have proven particularly powerful in solving complex cases of disputed blood relatedness. However, valid quantification of the evidence provided by X-STR genotypes in the form of likelihood ratios requires that the recombination rates between markers are exactly known. In a collaborative family study, we used X-STR genotype data from 401 two- and three-generation families to derive valid estimates of the recombination rates between 12 forensic markers widely used in forensic testing, namely DXS10148, DXS10135, DXS8378 (together constituting linkage group I), DXS7132, DXS10079, DXS10074 (linkage group II), DXS10103, HPRTB, DXS10101 (linkage group III), DXS10146, DXS10134 and DXS7423 (linkage group IV). Our study is the first to simultaneously allow for mutation and recombination in the underlying likelihood calculations, thereby obviating the bias-prone practice of excluding ambiguous transmission events from further consideration. The statistical analysis confirms that linkage groups I and II are transmitted independently from one another whereas linkage groups II, III and IV are characterised by inter-group recombination fractions that are notably smaller than 50%. Evidence was also found for recombination within all four linkage groups, with recombination fraction estimates ranging as high as 2% in the case of DXS10146 and DXS10134.
Forensic Science International-genetics | 2011
S. Inturri; Silvia Menegon; A. Amoroso; Carlo Torre; Carlo Robino
Twenty X-chromosomal short tandem repeat (STR) loci were typed in 80 families of Italian descent, composed by mother and two or more sons, for a total of 93 meiosis. The analyzed X-STR panel included six clusters of closely linked markers (each spanning<3cM): DXS10135-DXS10148-DXS8378 (Xp22); DXS7132-DXS10074-DXS10079 (Xq12); DXS6801-DXS6809-DXS6789 (Xq21); DXS7424-DXS101 (Xq22); DXS10103-HPRTB-DXS10101 (Xq26); DXS8377-DXS10134-DXS7423-DXS10146 (Xq28). Recombination fractions between pairs of markers calculated by pedigree analysis were compared with those obtained from the second-generation Rutgers combined linkage-physical map of the human genome. The observed differences confirm that recombination is not homogeneous along the X chromosome and that the conventional subdivision of X-STRs in four groups of completely unlinked markers cannot be regarded as true. Significant linkage disequilibrium was found between markers DXS6801 and DXS6809 (p=0.017). The effect on likelihood calculations of inferring haplotype frequencies from allele distributions rather than haplotype count in the relevant population was evaluated.
Forensic Science International-genetics | 2013
C. Previderè; Pierangela Grignani; F. Alessandrini; Milena Alù; R. Biondo; Ilaria Boschi; Luciana Caenazzo; I Carboni; E. Carnevali; F De Stefano; Ranieri Domenici; M. Fabbri; Emiliano Giardina; S. Inturri; Susi Pelotti; A. Piccinini; Marilidia Piglionica; Nicoletta Resta; Stefania Turrina; Andrea Verzeletti; Silvano Presciuttini
The 2011 collaborative exercise of the ISFG Italian Working Group GeFI was aimed at validating the five ENFSI/EDNAP miniSTR loci D1S1656, D2S441, D10S1248, D12S391 and D22S1045. The protocol required to type at least 50 multilocus profiles from locally resident individuals and two blind bloodstains in duplicate (i.e., using at least two different commercial kits), and to send the electropherograms to the Organizing Committee. Nineteen laboratories distributed across Italy participated, collecting a total of 960 samples. Full concordance was found for the five new miniSTRs as observed from the comparison of 13,150 alleles. The inspection of the electropherograms allowed the identification of a very limited number of mistypings in the miniSTR genotypes thus contributing to the establishment of an high quality Italian database of frequencies.
Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2004
Carlo Robino; Sarah Gino; S. Inturri; Carlo Torre
ABSTRACT: Italians residing in Piedmont (Northwest Italy) KEYWORDS: forensic science, DNA typing, population genetics, Piedmont, Italians, D3S1358, TH01, D21S11, D18S51, Penta E, D5S818,D13S317, D7S820, D16S539, CSF1PO, Penta D, vWA, D8S1179, TPOX, FGA Several studies on allelic frequencies of tetrameric STR loci(CODIS loci) in the Italian population have been published; how-ever, data regarding the distribution of recently introduced pen-tameric loci are still scarce.Blood/saliva samples were obtained from 147 unrelated Ital-ians residing in Piedmont (North West Italy). Genomic DNAwasisolated by means of spin columns (Macherey-Nagel, D¨uren,Germany).PCRamplificationwasperformedaccordingtotheman-ufacturer’s instruction using the GenePrint TM R PowerPlex 16 Sys-tem (Promega Corporation, Madison, WI). The amplified productswere detected with the 310 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosys-tems, Foster City, CA). Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium was evalu-ated by exact test using the software GENEPOP Version 3.3 (1).
Forensic Science International | 2006
Carlo Robino; S. Inturri; Sarah Gino; Carlo Torre; C. Di Gaetano; F. Crobu; Valentino Romano; Giuseppe Matullo; Alberto Piazza
Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series | 2011
S. Inturri; Carlo Robino; I. Carboni; Ugo Ricci; Sarah Gino
Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series | 2009
S. Inturri; Carlo Robino; Sarah Gino; S. Caratti; Carlo Torre
Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series | 2008
Carlo Robino; S. Inturri; S. Varacalli; A. Piccinini; Sarah Gino; Carlo Torre