학술논문

Non-Invasive Epigenetic Detection of Fetal Trisomy 21 in First Trimester Maternal Plasma
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
PLoS ONE. November 23, 2011, Vol. 6 Issue 11, e27709
Subject
Epigenetic inheritance
Methylation
Pregnancy
Pregnant women
Health
Science and technology
Language
English
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Background Down syndrome (DS) is the most common known aneuploidy, caused by an extra copy of all or part of chromosome 21. Fetal-specific epigenetic markers have been investigated for non-invasive prenatal detection of fetal DS. The phosphodiesterases gene, PDE9A, located on chromosome 21q22.3, is completely methylated in blood (M-PDE9A) and unmethylated in the placenta (U-PDE9A). Therefore, we estimated the accuracy of non-invasive fetal DS detection during the first trimester of pregnancy using this tissue-specific epigenetic characteristic of PDE9A. Methodology/Principal Findings A nested, case-control study was conducted using maternal plasma samples collected from 108 pregnant women carrying 18 DS and 90 normal fetuses (each case was matched with 5 controls according to gestational weeks at blood sampling). All pregnancies were singletons at or before 12 weeks of gestation between October 2008 and May 2009. The maternal plasma levels of M-PDE9A and U-PDE9A were measured by quantitative methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction. M-PDE9A and U-PDE9A levels were obtained in all samples and did not differ between male and female fetuses. M-PDE9A levels did not differ between the DS cases and controls (1854.3 vs 2004.5 copies/mL; P = 0.928). U-PDE9A levels were significantly elevated in women with DS fetuses compared with controls (356.8 vs 194.7 copies/mL, P Conclusions Our findings suggest that U-PDE9A level and the unmethylation index of PDE9A may be useful biomarkers for non-invasive fetal DS detection during the first trimester of pregnancy, regardless of fetal gender.
Author(s): Ji Hyae Lim 1 , Shin Young Kim 1 , So Yeon Park 1 , Shin Yeong Lee 1 , Mi Jin Kim 1 , You Jung Han 2 [...]