Objectives: Selective amplification of rare fetal cells in maternal blood is a potential strategy for non-invasive prenatal diagnosis. We assessed the proliferative potential of first trimester fetal progenitors compared to maternal ones.

Methods: Fetal and maternal haemopoietic progenitors were cultured separately and in two model mixtures: (i) co-cultures of male fetal nucleated cells mixed with maternal nucleated cells and (ii) co-cultures of malefetal CD34+ cells with maternal CD34+ cells. Cell origin was detected by X-Y fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) RESULTS: The frequency of haemopoietic progenitors in first trimester fetal blood (predominantly CFU-GEMM) differed from those in peripheral blood from pregnant women (predominantly BFU-e). First trimester haemopoietic progenitors formed larger colonies (p=0.0001) and their haemoglobinisation was accelerated compared to those of maternal origin (p<0.001). CD34+ fetal haemopoietic progenitor cells could be expanded four times more than their maternal counterparts (median 235.8-fold, range 174.0-968.0 vs 71.9-fold, range 41.1-192.0; p=0.003). While selective expansion of fetal cells was not observed in the mononuclear cell model, the CD34+ cell rare event mixtures produced a 463.2-fold (range 128.0-2915.0) expansion of fetal cells.

Conclusion: Selective expansion of first trimester fetal haemopoietic progenitors may be useful for amplifying fetal cells from maternal blood.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pd.350DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

haemopoietic progenitors
16
trimester fetal
12
progenitors trimester
8
fetal maternal
8
maternal blood
8
non-invasive prenatal
8
prenatal diagnosis
8
cells maternal
8
compared maternal
8
nucleated cells
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!