Infertility affects up to 15 percent of couples around the world, and in virto fertilization (IVF) is one way to treat this common condition. A study published by cell press December 19th in the journal cell reveals a safe, accurate, and low-cost thereby increase a couple’s chance of producing a healthy child.
Through whole-genome sequencing of individual egg cells, the
new method detects chromosomal abnormalities and DNA sequence variations
associated with genetic disorders. “In the way, we kill two birds with one
stone: one setoff deep sequencing analysis to avid two types of genetic problem,”
says study author Jie Qiao of Third Hospital, Peking University. “Theoretically,
if this works perfectly, we will be able to double the success rate of test
tube baby technology from 30 percent to 60 percent or even more.”
The IVF procedure involves joining a woman’s egg and a man’s
sperm in a laboratory dish and then transferring embryos into the woman’s womb.
Various procedures are currently available to detect genetic defects in embryos
prior to implantation, but these approaches are often invasive, requiring the
removal of cells from the growing embryo,
and do not simultaneously detect both chromosomal abnormalities and DNA
sequence variations associated with
genetic disorders.
Researchers have recently developed whole-genome sequencing
methods too simultaneously detect both types of defects in single human sperm cells,
but until now, an analogous approach had not been applied to egg cells even
though chromosomal abnormalities are much more common in egg cells than in sperm
cells.
In the new study, Sunney Xie of Peking University and
Harvard University teamed up with Qiao and Fuchou Tang of Peking University to
develop a method for sequencing the entire genomes of polar bodies – cells that
arise as a byproduct of egg cell division and often die later on.
Because polar bodies are dispensable for human embryonic
development, they can be safety removed without harming the embryo. “We are now
starting a clinical trial based on this approach,” Xie says. “If the clinical trial works, this technique
could enormously increase the success rate of IVF, especially for older women
or women who have had recurrent
miscarriages.”
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