| Literature DB >> 26237485 |
Ana Bustamante-Aragones1, Sara Perlado-Marina2, Maria José Trujillo-Tiebas3, Jesús Gallego-Merlo4, Isabel Lorda-Sanchez5, Luz Rodríguez-Ramirez6, Concepcion Linares7, Corazón Hernandez8, Marta Rodriguez de Alba9.
Abstract
Prenatal diagnosis (PD) is recommended in pregnancies after a Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD). However, conventional PD entails a risk of fetal loss which makes PGD patients reluctant to undergo obstetric invasive procedures. The presence of circulating fetal DNA in maternal blood allows performing a non-invasive prenatal diagnosis (NIPD) without risk for the pregnancy outcome. This work shows the introduction of NIPD for confirmation of PGD results in eight pregnancies. In those pregnancies referred to PGD for an X-linked disorder (six out of eight), fetal sex determination in maternal blood was performed to confirm fetal sex. One pregnancy referred to PGD for Marfan syndrome and one referred for Huntington disease (HD) were also analyzed. In seven out of eight cases, PGD results were confirmed by NIPD in maternal blood. No results were obtained in the HD pregnancy. NIPD in PGD pregnancies can be a reliable alternative for couples that after a long process feel reluctant to undergo PD due to the risk of pregnancy loss.Entities:
Keywords: NIPD; ccffDNA; maternal plasma; preimplantation genetic diagnosis
Year: 2014 PMID: 26237485 PMCID: PMC4449636 DOI: 10.3390/jcm3030913
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Table with oligos sequences used in the study.
| Disease/Case | Paternal Mutation/STR | Oligos Name | Oligos Sequence (5′ → 3′) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marfan Syndrome | c.7636G>A ( | FBN1-F | 5′-GCCCCCACTGCTTCTCA-3′ |
| FBN1-R | 5′-CCTCCACAAGGATTCACCAG-3′ | ||
| FBN1-S | 5′-CATTTGCCAGAACACTCCT-3′ | ||
| MTS2-F | 5′-GTAGTTGTTATCTTGCAGA-3′ | ||
| MTS2-R | 5′-CTGCCCTCTAGGACTCTAAG-3′ | ||
| MTS4-F | 5′-GATGTCCCTATTGCCATCACCAC-3′ | ||
| MTS4-R | 5′-CCTGTGCAGGGTAAGACAAG-3 | ||
| Huntington disease | CAG repeats ( | HTT-F | 5′-ATGGCGACCCTGGAAAAGCTGATGAA-3′ |
| HTT-R | 5′-GGCGGTGGCGGCTGTTGCTGC-3′ | ||
|
| I1CAHD-F | 5′-TATGCCACTACACTACAACCTGGGC-3′ | |
| I1CAHD-F | 5′-ACCAGCATGTGGTATTGTCAAAGTG-3′ | ||
|
| D4S126-F | 5′-GGATCCTGTCACTGTACT-3′ | |
| D4S126-R | 5′-GTTTCTTTGCTTAACCAGTTTGACCATGAGG-3′ | ||
|
| D4S127-F | 5′-CCTCTGTTTGCAATCCATTT-3′ | |
| D4S127-R | 5′-GTCCCTTGCATGCCCTGGCT-3′ |
Figure 1Analysis of SRY and GAPDH genes by Real-Time PCR in ccfDNA collected from maternal blood. Fetal sex determination is based on the presence/absence of the SRY gene. (a) Positive amplification for SRY and GAPDH. These results are associated to a male fetus; (b) Positive amplification for GAPDH and no amplification of SRY gene are associated to a female fetus.