» Articles » PMID: 19187450

Degeneration of Nuclei and Mitochondria in Human Hairs

Overview
Journal J Forensic Sci
Specialty Forensic Sciences
Date 2009 Feb 4
PMID 19187450
Citations 8
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

It is generally accepted that nuclei degrade in developing hair shafts but the point at which such occurs has not been investigated. The fate of mitochondria in the keratinizing hair shaft has been less clear. This study uses transmission electron microscopy to investigate when nuclei and mitochondria are no longer visible in the developing hair shaft. Serial sections were obtained from anagen head hairs absent follicles in order to determine the sequence of degradation of nuclei and mitochondria in the hair shaft by starting at the root bulb and proceeding toward the hair tip. It was demonstrated that nuclei and mitochondria become invisible in the keratinizing hair shaft at about the same time. This was found to occur fairly early in the process at the level of the hair shaft where the hair cuticle becomes permanent.

Citing Articles

Discrimination of mongoose hair from domestic cattle hair, human hair, and synthetic fiber using FTIR spectroscopy and chemometric analysis: a rapid, cost-effective, and field-deployable tool for wildlife forensics.

Jose S, Thiyagarajan K, Baskar C, Singh R, Vasanthakumari D, Udhayan A RSC Adv. 2024; 14(50):36937-36944.

PMID: 39569126 PMC: 11575182. DOI: 10.1039/d4ra06981a.


DNA and protein analyses of hair in forensic genetics.

Liu Z, Simayijiang H, Wang Q, Yang J, Sun H, Wu R Int J Legal Med. 2023; 137(3):613-633.

PMID: 36732435 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-023-02955-w.


Genotyping genetic markers from LCN and degraded DNA by HRM and their application in hair shaft.

Jiang E, Zhang S, Pang H Int J Legal Med. 2019; 134(1):31-37.

PMID: 31062081 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-019-02045-w.


Successful nuclear DNA profiling of rootless hair shafts: a novel approach.

Grisedale K, Murphy G, Brown H, Wilson M, Sinha S Int J Legal Med. 2017; 132(1):107-115.

PMID: 28993934 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-017-1698-z.


Feline mitochondrial DNA sampling for forensic analysis: when enough is enough!.

Grahn R, Alhaddad H, Alves P, Randi E, Waly N, Lyons L Forensic Sci Int Genet. 2014; 16:52-57.

PMID: 25531059 PMC: 4400830. DOI: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2014.11.017.