Noninvasive diagnosis of fetal aneuploidy by shotgun sequencing DNA from maternal blood

H. Christina Fan(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yair J. Blumenfeld(Stanford University), Usha Chitkara(Stanford University), Louanne Hudgins(Stanford University), Stephen R. Quake(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 7, 2008
Cited by 1,131Open Access
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Abstract

We directly sequenced cell-free DNA with high-throughput shotgun sequencing technology from plasma of pregnant women, obtaining, on average, 5 million sequence tags per patient sample. This enabled us to measure the over- and underrepresentation of chromosomes from an aneuploid fetus. The sequencing approach is polymorphism-independent and therefore universally applicable for the noninvasive detection of fetal aneuploidy. Using this method, we successfully identified all nine cases of trisomy 21 (Down syndrome), two cases of trisomy 18 (Edward syndrome), and one case of trisomy 13 (Patau syndrome) in a cohort of 18 normal and aneuploid pregnancies; trisomy was detected at gestational ages as early as the 14th week. Direct sequencing also allowed us to study the characteristics of cell-free plasma DNA, and we found evidence that this DNA is enriched for sequences from nucleosomes.


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