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Analysis of fetal DNA in maternal plasma with markers designed for forensic DNA mixture resolution.

PURPOSE: With the description of circulating fetal DNA in maternal blood, noninvasive prenatal diagnostics became theoretically possible. As the presence of background maternal DNA interferes with the detection of fetal DNA, analytical methods require genetic markers capable of distinguishing by quantitative or targeted approaches the minor population of DNA molecules of the fetus. Here we evaluate the feasibility of analyzing fetal DNA with novel DIP-STR genetic markers, designed for the investigation of forensic mixed biological evidence.

METHODS: The DIP-STR molecular approach is based on sequence-specific analysis of paternally inherited fetal alleles. These sequences are biallelic deletion/insertion polymorphisms (DIPs) located very close to short tandem repeat (STR) markers, for combined analysis. In this study, 48 women were tested with 28 DIP-STRs during the first, second, and third trimester of pregnancy.

RESULTS: Positive results were obtained across markers, including longer ones (386 base-pairs) and with blood samples collected during early pregnancy, such as 10 weeks of gestational age.

CONCLUSION: These data show that DIP-STR markers can be used to amplify specific genomic regions of circulating fetal DNA to obtain targeted genetic information. This method may contribute to developments in noninvasive prenatal paternity testing and diagnosis of certain genetic diseases.

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