Publication: Five Variable Number of Tandem Repeats Loci (D17S5, APOB, TPO Intron 10, IL-1α Intron 6, and CIAS1) in Thais and Application in the Prenatal Diagnostic Laboratory
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Issued Date
2022
Resource Type
Language
eng
File Type
application/pdf
ISSN
19450265
Rights Holder(s)
Scopus
Bibliographic Citation
Eurasian Journal of Educational Research. Vol 2022, No.98 (2022), p.131-146
Suggested Citation
Singsanan S., Yamsri S., Pangjit K., Saenwang P., Karnpean R., Fucharoen S. Five Variable Number of Tandem Repeats Loci (D17S5, APOB, TPO Intron 10, IL-1α Intron 6, and CIAS1) in Thais and Application in the Prenatal Diagnostic Laboratory. Eurasian Journal of Educational Research. Vol 2022, No.98 (2022), p.131-146. doi:10.1089/gtmb.2022.0010 Retrieved from: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14740/9256
Abstract
Background: Prenatal diagnosis of genetic disease requires DNA analysis of fetal tissue of a responsible gene. Accurate diagnosis is useful for the appropriate management of pregnancy. However, maternal contamination of fetal specimens poses a high preanalytical risk of prenatal misdiagnosis. We have examined five variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) polymorphisms for use in monitoring potential maternal contamination. Materials and Methods: A study was conducted to examine the heterozygosities of five VNTR loci including, D17S5, APOB, TPO intron 10, IL-1α intron 6, and CIAS1 in 200 unrelated Thai subjects and applied to the monitoring of maternal contamination in 22 families at risk of having fetuses with severe thalassemia. Results: The heterozygosities of D17S5, APOB, TPO intron 10, IL-1α intron 6, and CIAS1 VNTRs were 59.5, 19.5, 66.0, 35.5, and 42.0%, respectively. Therefore, the TPO intron 10 and D17S5 loci were chosen for prenatal diagnosis of thalassemia in 22 families. Analyses of these VNTRs demonstrated an increase of informative data from 59.1% provided by the routine D1S80 VNTR analysis to 90.9%. Conclusions: The VNTR diagnostic procedure described above is simple, cost-effective, rapid, and does not require the use of sophisticated instruments; it should prove useful in the prenatal diagnosis of thalassemia. © 2022, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers 2022.
