Publications by authors named "Eugene Glazyrina"

Trisomy is the presence of one extra copy of an entire chromosome or its part in a cell nucleus. In humans, autosomal trisomies are associated with severe developmental abnormalities leading to embryonic lethality, miscarriage or pronounced deviations of various organs and systems at birth. Trisomies are characterized by alterations in gene expression level, not exclusively on the trisomic chromosome, but throughout the genome.

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High-throughput sequencing of fetal DNA is a promising and increasingly common method for the discovery of all (or all coding) genetic variants in the fetus, either as part of prenatal screening or diagnosis, or for genetic diagnosis of spontaneous abortions. In many cases, the fetal DNA (from chorionic villi, amniotic fluid, or abortive tissue) can be contaminated with maternal cells, resulting in the mixture of fetal and maternal DNA. This maternal cell contamination (MCC) undermines the assumption, made by traditional variant callers, that each allele in a heterozygous site is covered, on average, by 50% of the reads, and therefore can lead to erroneous genotype calls.

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