Abstract

In the present study, we developed a fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) strategy, which allows a reliable determination of the chromatid number of specific chromosomes in mature human oocytes. 168 unfertilized oocytes were analyzed by dual-color FISH with two direct-labeled locus-specific DNA probes for chromosome 13 and 21. To exclude FISH failures, metaphases with abnormal signal patterns were reanalyzed by multi-locus-FISH (ML-FISH) for chromosome 13 and 21. Following dual-color FISH, abnormal signal patterns were detected in 21 out of 108 metaphases (19.4%). 17 of these metaphases were reanalyzed by ML-FISH. In contrast to the first FISH, seven metaphases showed normal signal patterns after rehybridization, whereas ten metaphases remained abnormal. Out of these real aneuploid metaphases, five showed gain or loss of a single signal (= chromatid), two showed missing double signals (= chromosome) and three showed both. In conclusion, locus-specific FISH probes facilitate differentiation between first meiotic nondisjunction of whole chromosomes and prematurely divided chromatids. Moreover, simultaneous hybridization with a second locus-specific probe on the same chromatid (ML-FISH) helps to differentiate between FISH failures and real meiotic division errors and therefore, allows a more reliable analysis of aneuploidies in human oocytes.

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