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US software to speed up DNA profile matching

A city-based forensic lab will soon install software developed by the US probe agency FBI that would substantially reduce the time taken for matching of DNA profiles of victims of large-scale disasters, with better analysis.

Updated on: Jun 26, 2014 04:04 PM IST
PTI | By , Hyderabad
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A city-based forensic lab will soon install software developed by the US probe agency FBI that would substantially reduce the time taken for matching of DNA profiles of victims of large-scale disasters, with better analysis.

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HT Image

The software, which was used by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to identify the 9/11 World Trade Center attack victims, is planned to be first put to use in India on the victims of last year’s Uttarakhand tragedy, whose identification process by DNA profiling by the Center for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics (CDFD) is set to get a boost vis-a-vis the required analysis.

The software named ‘CODIS’ (Combined DNA Index System) would be operationalised by the first week of August by the state-run CDFD, in line to become the country’s first forensic lab for speedy matching of DNA profiles of victims of mass disasters, a senior official said.

“We are in the process of acquiring and operationalising the software developed by FBI which will enable speedy matching of DNA profiles of victims of large-scale disasters. India doesn’t have such kind of software and we are getting it next month and will be using it for the first time to identify victims of Uttarakhand natural calamity (in which thousands are presumed dead),” CDFD director J Gowrishankar said.

A two-member team of FBI’s DNA Lab wing will come to the city next month and install the software on CDFD computers. They will train the centre’s DNA examiners on its usage during a three-day workshop. CDFD and FBI had signed an MoU early this year for the acquisition of ‘CODIS’.

“FBI had used the software to identify victims of 9/11 World Trade Center attack victims. The software would be used for the first time in India to match data of DNA profiles of 400 victims with blood samples of close relatives of over 5,000 missing individuals of last year’s Uttarakhand tragedy,” he said.

 
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