The separation of trophoblast cells from the maternal circulation could provide a valuable diagnostic tool for prenatal diagnosis of genetic abnormalities. This has been attempted using antibody methods, but due to non-specificity of the antibodies, maternal cell contamination remains a problem. We have investigated the potential of dielectrophoretic separation methods as a means of isolating trophoblast cells from mixed peripheral blood mononuclear cells. To determine the potential of this method the dielectric properties of trophoblast cells and mixed peripheral blood mononuclear cells were measured using dielectrophoretic crossover and single cell electrorotation methods. Both dielectrophoretic crossover data and electrorotation data gave an average specific membrane capacitance of the peripheral blood mononuclear cells of 11.5 mF m(-2). Trophoblast cells prepared using three different methods had a higher average specific membrane capacitance in the range 13-18 mF m(-2). The differences in capacitance between the cell types could be exploited as the basis of an AC electrokinetic-based system for the separation of trophoblast cells from peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
A single copy Y-chromosome DNA sequence was amplified using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from the peripheral blood of 30 women who had achieved a pregnancy through an in vitro fertilization (IVF) programme. The time of conception was known precisely and was confirmed by serial ultrasound scans. Conceptions were dated as the number of weeks after fertilization plus 2, to give a time equivalent to the obstetric menstrual dating of the pregnancy (LMP). Y-chromosome-specific DNA was detected in all pregnancies with a male fetus (18/30). The earliest detection was at 4 weeks and 5 days, and the latest at 7 weeks and 1 day. Y-chromosome-specific sequences were no longer detected in any of the male pregnancies 8 weeks after delivery. No Y-chromosome sequences were detected in any of the pregnancies where only female babies were delivered. This demonstrates that fetal DNA appears in the maternal circulation early in the first trimester, that it can be identified in all pregnancies tested by 7 weeks, that it continues to be present throughout pregnancy, and that it has been cleared from the maternal circulation 2 months after parturition. Early non-invasive prenatal diagnosis for aneuploidies and inherited disorders will be possible in all pregnancies if fetal cells can be isolated free from maternal contamination (or identified accurately in the presence of maternal cells) without problems of contamination from previous pregnancies.
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