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      Common variants spanning PLK4 are associated with mitotic-origin aneuploidy in human embryos

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          Abstract

          Aneuploidy, the inheritance of an atypical chromosome complement, is common in early human development and is the primary cause of pregnancy loss. By screening day-3 embryos during in vitro fertilization cycles, we identified an association between aneuploidy of putative mitotic origin and linked genetic variants on chromosome 4 of maternal genomes. This associated region contains a candidate gene, Polo-like kinase 4 ( PLK4), which plays a well-characterized role in centriole duplication and has the ability to alter mitotic fidelity upon minor dysregulation. Mothers with the high-risk genotypes contributed fewer embryos for testing at day 5, suggesting that their embryos are less likely to survive to blastulation. The associated region coincides with a signature of a selective sweep in ancient humans, suggesting that the causal variant was either the target of selection or hitchhiked to substantial frequency.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          0404511
          7473
          Science
          Science
          Science (New York, N.Y.)
          0036-8075
          1095-9203
          6 May 2017
          10 April 2015
          20 July 2017
          : 348
          : 6231
          : 235-238
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA
          [2 ]Natera, Inc., San Carlos, California, USA
          Author notes
          Correspondence regarding the data should be addressed to Z.D. ( zdemko@ 123456natera.com ), while other correspondence should be addressed to R.C.M. ( rmccoy@ 123456stanford.edu ) or D.A.P. ( dpetrov@ 123456stanford.edu )
          Article
          PMC5519344 PMC5519344 5519344 nihpa872125
          10.1126/science.aaa3337
          5519344
          25859044
          85049693-3928-45ca-bc2d-ab48888643df
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