Global Gene Expression Analysis of the Living Human Fetus Using Cell-Free Messenger RNA in Amniotic Fluid
CONTEXT No molecular biological tests are available to monitor the ongoing development of human fetuses in vivo. OBJECTIVE To determine whether cell-free fetal messenger RNA (mRNA) in amniotic fluid can be detected using oligonucleotide microarrays to study large-scale gene expression in living huma...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2005-02, Vol.293 (7), p.836-842 |
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Zusammenfassung: | CONTEXT No molecular biological tests are available to monitor the ongoing development
of human fetuses in vivo. OBJECTIVE To determine whether cell-free fetal messenger RNA (mRNA) in amniotic
fluid can be detected using oligonucleotide microarrays to study large-scale
gene expression in living human fetuses, with analysis of sex, gestational
age, and fetal pathology as variables. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS Four samples of cell-free amniotic fluid were analyzed from pregnant
women between 20 and 32 weeks’ gestation and undergoing amnioreduction
for polyhydramnios associated with twin-twin transfusion syndrome or hydrops
fetalis (cases). The control consisted of 6 pooled amniotic fluid samples
from women at 17 weeks’ gestation and undergoing genetic amniocentesis.
After extraction from the normally discarded fraction of amniotic fluid, RNA
was amplified twice, labeled, and analyzed using gene expression microarrays. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE Relative mRNA expression in cell-free samples of amniotic fluid from
fetuses with polyhydramnios at different gestational ages vs cell-free amniotic
fluid from a pooled control. RESULTS Thirty-six percent of 22 283 probe sets represented on the arrays
were present in the cell-free amniotic fluid, and a median of 20% of all probe
sets differed between cases and the pooled control. Only male samples expressed
1 Y chromosome transcript. The expression of some developmental transcripts,
such as surfactant proteins, mucins, and keratins, changed with gestational
age by up to 64-fold. A water transporter gene transcript was increased up
to 18-fold in both twin-twin transfusion samples. Placental gene transcripts
were not present in any samples. CONCLUSIONS This pilot study demonstrates that cell-free fetal mRNA can be extracted
from amniotic fluid and successfully hybridized to gene expression microarrays.
Preliminary analysis suggests that gene expression changes can be detected
in fetuses of different sexes, gestational age, and disease status. Cell-free
mRNA in amniotic fluid appears to originate from the fetus and not the placenta. |
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ISSN: | 0098-7484 1538-3598 |
DOI: | 10.1001/jama.293.7.836 |