Bianchi D W, Mahr A, Zickwolf G K, Houseal T W, Flint A F, Klinger K W
Division of Genetics, Children's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115.
Hum Genet. 1992 Dec;90(4):368-70. doi: 10.1007/BF00220460.
Fetal cells were isolated from the peripheral blood of a pregnant woman at 19 weeks of gestation whose fetus had Down syndrome. An amniocentesis had been performed 2 weeks earlier because of abnormalities detected on an antenatal sonogram. Fetal cells were separated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting using monoclonal antibody to the transferrin receptor (TfR). Fluorescence in situ hybridization studies with probes for chromosomes Y and 21 revealed a small number of 47,XY,+21 cells in the TfR+ sorted fraction. Although preliminary, the results of this study suggest the possibility that one day, fetal chromosome aneuploidy will be routinely diagnosed from maternal venous blood samples.