Ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency is an X-linked dominant metabol
ic disorder with partial penetrance in heterozygous females. Affected boys
usually die from hyperammonemia in the first few days of life? while clinic
al expression in carrier females ranges from no symptoms to neonatal death.
A young couple whose boy had died of OTC deficiency in the neonatal period
was referred to our genetic department for their subsequent pregnancy. The
fetus was found to be affected, and after genetic counseling the pregnancy
was terminated. Prenatal diagnosis of the third pregnancy identified a het
erozygous female, who died after a normal birth at age 11 days from hyperam
monemia. After this, the couple asked for preimplantation genetic diagnosis
(PGD). We have developed a duplex nested PCR assay allowing the amplificat
ion of both the mutation and an informative restriction fragment length pol
ymorphism (RFLP) located in the 3' end of the OTC gene. After nested amplif
ication, allele identification was carried out for both loci by double rest
riction digestion and electrophoresis gel analysis. The co-amplification of
both loci provided a means of detecting potential allele dropout or incomp
lete digestion. Two PGD cycles were carried out, a total of 14 embryos were
analysed and a diagnosis could be obtained in 13/14 embryos. There were fo
ur unaffected male embryos, four heterozygous females and four unaffected f
emales; the final embryo was an affected one of undetermined gender. In bot
h cycles, three unaffected embryos could be transferred early on Day 4 post
-insemination. The second cycle resulted in the birth of a baby boy devoid
of the OTC mutation. This constitutes the first birth following PGD carried
out by a French team. Copyright (C) 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.