Massively Parallel Sequencing for Chromosomal Abnormality Testing in Trophectoderm Cells of Human Blastocysts1

Xuyang Yin(BGI Group (China)), Ke Tan(National Engineering Research Center of Human Stem Cells), Gábor Vajta(Central Queensland University), Hui Jiang(BGI Group (China)), Yue‐Qiu Tan(Central South University), Chunlei Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Fang Chen(BGI Group (China)), ShengPei Chen(State Key Laboratory of Digital Medical Engineering), ChunSheng Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Xiaoyu Pan(South China University of Technology), Chun Gong(BGI Group (China)), XuChao Li(BGI Group (China)), Chuyu Lin(BGI Group (China)), Ya Gao(BGI Group (China)), Yu Liang(BGI Group (China)), Xin Yi(BGI Group (China)), Feng Mu(BGI Group (China)), Lijian Zhao(BGI Group (China)), Huanhuan Peng(BGI Group (China)), Bo Xiong(Reproductive & Genetic Hospital CITIC-Xiangya), Shuo-Ping Zhang(Reproductive & Genetic Hospital CITIC-Xiangya), Dehua Cheng(Reproductive & Genetic Hospital CITIC-Xiangya), Guangxiu Lu(Reproductive & Genetic Hospital CITIC-Xiangya), Xiuqing Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Ge Lin(National Engineering Research Center of Human Stem Cells), Wei Wang(BGI Group (China))
Biology of Reproduction
January 25, 2013
Cited by 154Open Access
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Abstract

Preimplantation genetic diagnosis and screening are widely accepted for chromosomal abnormality identification to avoid transferring embryos with genetic defects. Massively parallel sequencing (MPS) is a rapidly developing approach for genome analysis with increasing application in clinical practice. The purpose of this study was to use MPS for identification of aneuploidies and unbalanced chromosomal rearrangements after blastocyst biopsy. Trophectoderm (TE) samples of 38 blastocysts from 16 in vitro fertilization cycles were subjected to analysis. Low-coverage whole genome sequencing was performed using the Illumina HiSeq2000 platform with a novel algorithm purposely created for chromosomal analysis. The efficiency of this MPS approach was estimated by comparing results obtained by an Affymetrix single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array. Whole genome amplification (WGA) products of TE cells were detected by MPS, with an average of 0.07× depth and 5.5% coverage of the human genome. Twenty-six embryos (68.4%) were detected as euploid, while six embryos (15.8%) contained uniform aneuploidies. Four of these (10.5%) were with solely unbalanced chromosomal rearrangements, whereas the remaining two embryos (5.3%) showed both aneuploidies and unbalanced rearrangements. Almost all these results were confirmed by the SNP array, with the exception of one sample, where different sizes of unbalanced rearrangements were detected, possibly due to chromosomal GC bias in array analysis. Our study demonstrated MPS could be applied to accurately detect embryonic chromosomal abnormality with a flexible and cost-effective strategy and higher potential accuracy.


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