Noninvasive prenatal diagnosis of Mendelian disorders for consanguineous couples by relative genotype dosage.
Siv FokstuenLina QuteinehValerie M SchwitzgebelBettina Köhler-BallanJean-Louis BlouinMarc AbramowiczThierry NouspikelPublished in: Clinical genetics (2023)
Noninvasive prenatal diagnosis relies on the presence in maternal blood of circulating cell-free fetal DNA released by apoptotic trophoblast cells. Widely used for aneuploidy screening, it can also be applied to monogenic diseases (NIPD-M) in case of known parental mutations. Due to the confounding effect of maternal DNA, detection of maternal or biparental mutations requires relative haplotype dosage (RHDO), a method relying on the presence of SNPs that are heterozygous in one parent and homozygous in the other. Unavoidably, there is a risk of test failure by lack of such informative SNPs, an event particularly likely for consanguineous couples who often share common haplotypes in regions of identity-by-descent. Here we present a novel approach, relative genotype dosage (RGDO) that bypasses this predicament by directly assessing fetal genotype with SNPs that are heterozygous in both parents (frequent in regions of identity-by-descent). We show that RGDO is as sensitive as RHDO and that it performs well over a large range of fetal fractions and DNA amounts, thereby opening NIPD-M to most consanguineous couples. We also report examples of couples, consanguineous or not, where combining RGDO and RHDO allowed a diagnosis that would not have been possible with only one approach.
Keyphrases
- cell free
- circulating tumor
- birth weight
- intimate partner violence
- genome wide
- pregnancy outcomes
- early onset
- cell death
- single molecule
- cell cycle arrest
- genome wide association
- circulating tumor cells
- pregnant women
- anti inflammatory
- body mass index
- nucleic acid
- physical activity
- cell proliferation
- signaling pathway
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- label free
- quantum dots
- real time pcr