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Identification of missing persons: The Spanish "Phoenix" Program

[PDF] Lorente_PhoenixProgram.pdf (77.08Kb)
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/32448
ISSN: 0353-9504
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Author
Lorente Acosta, José Antonio; Entrala, Carmen; Álvarez Merino, Juan Carlos; Arce, Blanca; Heinrichs, Beatriz; Lorente Acosta, Miguel; Carrasco, Felíx; Budowle, Bruce; Villanueva Cañadas, Enrique
Editorial
Medicinska Naklada
Materia
DNA
 
Mitochondrial
 
Fluorescent probes
 
Forensic medicine
 
Polymerase chain reaction
 
Polymorphism
 
Restriction fragment length
 
Spain
 
United States
 
Date
2001
Referencia bibliográfica
Lorente, J.A.; et al. Identification of missing persons: The Spanish "Phoenix" Program. Croatian Medical Journal, 42(3): 267-270 (2001). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/32448]
Sponsorship
We acknowledge the nine Spanish Foundations supporting this program (BBV, Caja Madrid, Endesa, Juan March, Marcelino Botín, Pedro Barrié de la Maza, Ramón Areces, Tabacalera, and Telefónica). Spanish Ministry of Education and Science supports the research on minimal amounts of DNA through the project PM97-0175.
Abstract
In 1999, Spain was the first country to officially start a National Program to try to identify cadavers and human remains which could not be identified by the use of traditional forensic approaches. This attempt is called “Phoenix Program”. Two independent mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) databases were generated, which can automatically compare and match identical or similar sequences. One is the Reference Database, with mtDNA sequences from maternal relatives of missing persons, who provide the samples (buccal swabs) voluntarily; the other is the Questioned Database, comprised ofmtDNAdata of unknown remains and cadavers. Although the first phase of the program (typing of all unidentified human remains) will probably not be completed until December 2003, positive identifications are being made in the interim. To date, more than 1,200 families have contacted Phoenix, and at least 280 reference samples and 48 questioned evidences have been analyzed. When mtDNA matches are found, another independent analysis is performed as a part of the quality control mechanism. Once a match is confirmed (so far in 6 cases), an attempt is made to analyze short tandem repeat (STR) loci.Wecall for international collaboration to make this effort valuable worldwide.
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