DETECTION OF ANEUPLOIDY AND CHROMOSOMAL MOSAICISM IN HUMAN EMBRYOS DURING PREIMPLANTATION SEX DETERMINATION BY FLUORESCENT IN-SITU HYBRIDIZATION, (FISH)
Jda. Delhanty et al., DETECTION OF ANEUPLOIDY AND CHROMOSOMAL MOSAICISM IN HUMAN EMBRYOS DURING PREIMPLANTATION SEX DETERMINATION BY FLUORESCENT IN-SITU HYBRIDIZATION, (FISH), Human molecular genetics, 2(8), 1993, pp. 1183-1185
Five couples at risk of producing offspring with X-linked recessive di
sease underwent in vitro fertilisation with a view to preimplantation
determination of embryo sex and selective transfer of females. On day
three post-insemination, one or two blastomeres were removed by embryo
biopsy, and used for dual fluorescent in situ hybridisation with X an
d Y chromosome-specific DNA probes. In two cases, two female embryos w
ere transferred and one pregnancy, (sex confirmed), is ongoing at 19 w
eeks. All eight embryos from one couple were of such poor quality that
diagnosis was possible in one only. In the remaining two cases no emb
ryos were transferred due to the detection of an abnormal number of X
chromosome signals. Investigation of the biopsied embryos that were no
t transferred revealed evidence of mitotic non-disjunction in one and
of complete X monosomy in a second. A surviving fetus with this latter
constitution would have developed Turner syndrome and would also have
been at high risk of X-linked disease. The use of fluorescent in situ
hybridisation rather than the polymerase chain reaction allowed the d
etection of abnormal copy numbers of X chromosomes thus preventing the
transfer of potentially abnormal zygotes.