Beyond the Core: The Role of Supplementary Short Tandem Repeats in Forensic Genetics
Vitória Ramos, Benedita Ferreira-Silva, Jennifer Fadoni, António Amorim, Laura CainéConventional forensic DNA profiling predominantly utilizes established core sets of autosomal short tandem repeats (STRs), such as the FBI’s Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) and the European Standard Set (ESS). While these panels are effective for standard forensic casework, they may be inadequate in more demanding scenarios, including severely degraded samples, complex multi-contributor mixtures, and kinship cases with deficiencies, where enhanced discriminatory capability is crucial. Additional non-core STR loci address these challenges while maintaining the non-coding, phenotypically uninformative nature that ensures the legal and ethical acceptability of forensic genetic evidence in court. This review assesses the forensic applications, population genetic parameters, validation requirements, and ethical considerations associated with non-core STR loci. A representative supplementary STR panel is presented as a case study to illustrate both the forensic value and the analytical requirements associated with the implementation of extended non-core STR systems. Challenges in implementation were identified in areas such as nomenclature standardization, backward compatibility with existing national databases, and geographic gaps in population reference data. The review concludes that a hybrid strategy, which retains core capillary electrophoresis (CE)-based profiling for routine casework and employs extended non-core panels for complex cases, represents the most practical path for the field.