Researchers at the Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience at Cambridge report a mouse model of aneuploidy, where some cells in the embryo contain an abnormal number of chromosomes. Normally, each cell in the human embryo should contain 23 pairs of chromosomes (22 pairs of chromosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes), but some can carry multiple copies of chromosomes, which can lead of developmental disorders. For example, children born with three copies of chromosome 21 will develop Down’s syndrome.
Pregnant mothers — particular older mothers, whose offspring are at greatest risk of developing such disorders — are offered tests to predict the likelihood of genetic abnormalities. Between the 11th and 14th weeks of pregnancy, mothers may be offered chorionic villus sampling (CVS), a test that involves removing and analysing cells from the placenta. A later test, known as amniocentesis, involves analysing cells shed by the foetus into the surrounding amniotic fluid — this test is more accurate, but is usually carried out during weeks 15–20 of the pregnancy, when the foetus is further developed.
Professor Magdalena
At the time, a CVS test found that as many as a quarter of the cells in the placenta that joined her and her developing baby were abnormal: could the developing baby also have abnormal cells? When Professor
Fortunately for Professor
«Many expectant mothers have to make a difficult choice about their pregnancy based on a test whose results we don’t fully understand," says Professor
«In fact, abnormal cells with numerical and/or structural anomalies of chromosomes have been observed in as many as 80–90% of human early stage embryos following in vitro fertilization," says Professor Thierry Voet from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, UK, and the University of Leuven, Belgium, another senior author of this paper, «and CSV tests may expose some degree of these abnormalities.»
In research funded by the Wellcome Trust, Professor
In embryos where the mix of normal and abnormal cells was half and half, the researchers observed that the abnormal cells within the embryo were killed off by ‘apoptosis’, or
«The embryo has an amazing ability to correct itself," explains Professor
The researchers will now try to determine the exact proportion of healthy cells needed to completely repair an embryo and the mechanism by which the abnormal cells are eliminated.