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DNA fingerprinting had a well-defined birthday. In the March 7,
1985 issue of Nature, Alec Jeffreys and coworkers described the
first develop ment ofmu1tilocus probes capable of simultaneously
revealing hypervari ability at many loci in the human genome and
called the procedure DNA fingerprinting. It was a royal birth in
the best British tradition. In a few months the emerging technique
had permitted the denouement of hith erto insoluble immigration and
paternity disputes and was already heralded as a major revolution
in forensic sciences. In the next year (October, 1986) DNA
fingerprinting made a dramatic entree in criminal investigations
with the Enderby murder case, whose story eventually was turned
into a best-selling book ("The Blooding" by Joseph Wambaugh). Today
DNA typing systems are routinely used in public and commercial
forensic laboratories in at least 25 different countries and have
replaced conventional protein markers as the methods of choice for
solving paternity disputes and criminal cases. Moreover, DNA
fingerprinting has emerged as a new domain of intense scientific
activity, with myriad applications in just about every imaginable
territory of life sciences. The Second International Conference on
DNA Fingerprinting, which was held in Belo Horizonte, Brazil in
November of 1992, was a clear proof of this."
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