The bodies of 28 people found in a set of mass graves are not those of students who went missing last month, Mexican authorities have said.
The graves were unearthed outside the town of Iguala in the southern state of Guerrero.
At a news conference, Mexico's Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam said: "I can tell you that in the first mass graves we found, for the very first ones we already have results, and I can confirm that there are no matches to the DNA that the families of the missing people gave us."
Experts are still testing remains recovered from other mass burial sites found near the city but no further information has been revealed.
The 43 student teachers disappeared after a confrontation with police, who are suspected of being involved in their disappearance.
Local authorities say the police were working with a local drug gang.
Benjamin Mondragon, or "Benjamon" the alleged leader of the drug gang, Guerreros Unidos, killed himself during a gunfight with Mexican security forces on Tuesday, the head of national security revealed.
"We hoped to make this person, Benjamin Mondragon, surrender. But he showed up, said something aloud and shot himself in the head," Monte Alejandro Rubido told reporters.
Meanwhile, 14 more people have been arrested in connection with the disappearance of the students.
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Gallery: Protest Blaze Over Mexico Massacre
A firefighter uses a hose to put out a blaze in Chilpancingo City Hall after it was set on fire by demonstrators, in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero
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The demonstrators are demanding the government find 43 college students, missing since last month's deadly clashes
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On 26 September, police allegedly linked to a criminal gang shot dead at least three students and abducted dozens of others during clashes in the southwestern city of Iguala
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Forty-three of the students are still missing and public anger has mounted since the state government found mass graves filled with burned corpses in the hills outside Iguala and said it believed many of the students may be among the victims
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A vehicle burns in front of riot police as students of the Ayotzinapa Teacher Training College - Raul Isidro Burgos - protest
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Mexican authorities found four more clandestine graves containing charred human remains at the site in the restive southwest of the country
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Students from the training college hold pictures of missing students outside the General Attorney building in Chilpancingo
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A piece of cloth is pictured next to a clandestine grave at La Joya, in the outskirts of Iguala
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Demonstrators set fire to a picture of Guerrero Governor Angel Aguirre
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Police officers stand guard near the clandestine graves. Click through for more pictures
Those arrested had "confessed to their participation, claiming they received the students and later delivered them, in between the limits of the cities of Iguala and Cocula, to the criminal gang that operates in the area, which calls itself 'Guerreros Unidos'", a top police chief revealed.
The drugs gang allegedly had ties to the family of the mayor of Iguala.
The disappearance of the students has caused outcry, with parents and relatives holding protests on the streets demanding the authorities do more to find their loved ones.
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