Introduction

Noninvasive prenatal screening (NIPS) is now used worldwide for the detection of common aneuploidies. With NIPS, cell-free fetal DNA in the maternal plasma is analyzed. Even though NIPS is a highly sensitive and specific screening test, false-positive results are sometimes obtained. Most false-positive results can be explained by confined placental mosaicism, since the primary source of fetal DNA in the maternal circulation is the placental cytotrophoblast.1 Other causes of false-positive NIPS results are maternal mosaicism,2 maternal copy-number variants,3 maternal cancer,4 or a vanishing twin.5

We detected a roughly 20 megabase (Mb) deletion of 10(q25→qter) in eight independent samples tested. During extensive follow-up investigations, the detected loss on chromosome 10 was initially not seen in fetal, maternal, or placental tissue. The deletions showed strong similarities in breakpoint locations, while sample analyses were performed in three different centers and at different points in time, thus ruling out run- and laboratory-specific effects as a cause. In an effort to explain these false-positive NIPS results, it was noticed that the proximal breakpoint of the deletion occurred at the location of FRA10B. As it is known that expression of fragile sites is associated with mosaic deletions, we questioned whether this fragile site could be involved in the apparent NIPS deletion.6

Fragile sites are heritable specific chromosome loci that exhibit an increased frequency of gaps, poor staining, constrictions, or breaks when chromosomes are exposed to partial DNA replication inhibition. They are classified as common (present in all individuals) or rare (<5% of the population) and are further subdivided into different groups based on their specific induction chemistry.7 There are two known fragile sites for 10q25: FRA10B and FRA10E. FRA10E is a common fragile site and thus present in all (or nearly all) individuals. In contrast, FRA10B is a rare and non-folate-sensitive fragile site. Although it classifies as rare, the population frequency of cytogenetic expression of FRA10B is ~1/40 in the Australian population.8 In the group of non-folate-sensitive fragile sites, FRA10B, together with FRA12C, is unique in that it requires bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) for expression, whereas it is not inducible by AT-minor groove binders such as distamycin A.7 The core of FRA10B consists of a variety of AT-rich (91%) repeats. These AT-rich repeats vary in size between 16 and 52 base pairs, at least 16 different alleles have been described.9 Normal alleles can be divided into three groups: small normal (repeat <1 kilobases (kb); 66% of normal alleles), intermediate normal (repeat 1–2 kb; 33% of normal alleles), and long normal (2–5 kb; 1% of normal alleles). Expanded repeats are >5 kb in length up to at least 20 kb. The three normal groups have group-specific flanking sequences. The long normal group shares the flanking repeats with the expansions, suggesting that the expansions are derived from the long normal group.9 Expansions are caused by an increase in the copy number of the repeat motifs. Inverted AT-rich repeats form hairpin structures that may contribute to their further expansion.10 The expansion of AT-rich inverted repeats may generate perturbation of DNA replication.11 FRA10B is located in a transitional region between early and late zones of replication. Expanded alleles show a delayed replication pattern distal from the repeat, whereas proximally, no difference compared with normal alleles is seen.12

Materials and methods

All samples were analyzed as part of the Dutch TRIDENT study, which includes the analysis of aberrations other than trisomy 21, 18, and 13 (trisomies and subchromosomal aberrations of approximately 10 Mb and more; sex chromosomal anomalies are not reported in the TRIDENT study).13,14 A license to perform this study was given by the Ministry of Health. All participants signed an informed consent form. Bioinformatic analysis was performed using WISECONDOR at default settings as described.15 Furthermore, adaptations to WISECONDOR were made to pinpoint the affected area more precisely. We increased the resolution by changing the bin size from 1 Mb to 250 kb. Speed and precision were improved by replacing LOESS GC-correction with principal component analysis, where the principal component analysis transform was determined over the reference sample set. After mapping data to the principal component analysis dimensions (using the first three components), the original data were reconstructed and the difference between this reconstruction and the actual signal was taken as the read depth input per bin for WISECONDOR. The windowed z-score approach was replaced with a segmentation algorithm that focuses on finding the strongest Stouffer’s z-scores over all possible windows per chromosome, allowing optimization of the call down to single bins. As these changes increase the number of tests per sample, the z-score threshold for significant aberrations had to increase as well. Instead of the usual threshold of 3, the script determined the required z-score to be 4.8 for our purposes. All scripts are available from https://github.com/VUmcCGP/wisecondor.

Maternal lymphocytes were grown in Roswell Park Memorial Institute medium with or without adding 2 μM BrdU for 24 h. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) was performed with a probe for 10qter (GS-261-B16) and a control probe for 10pter (GS-23-B11). Probes were labeled in house using the BioPrime DNA Labeling System (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA). Array comparative genomic hybridization analysis was performed using either the 180 K SurePrint G3 Human CGH Microarray (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA) at the Academic Medical Center (AMC) or the Infinium CytoSNP-850k genotyping array (Illumina, San Diego, CA) at the Erasmus Medical Center (EMC).

Results

In our original study, a total of 2,527 NIPS results were reported14 In two cases, a terminal deletion of chromosome 10q was observed (a frequency of 1 in 1,263). The other six cases were added later. The original WISECONDOR results for the eight 10(q25→ter) deletions are shown in Figure 1a. The enhanced NIPS pipeline was subsequently used for the three samples that were processed at VU University Medical Center (samples VUMC 1, AMC 1, and AMC 2). This high-resolution analysis defined the individual start of the deletions as: between 113,250,000 and 135,000,000 with an effect size of −3.07% for VUMC 1; between 113,000,000 and 135,000,000 with an effect size of −4.54% for AMC 1; and between 112,750,000 and 135,250,000 with an effect size of −4.39% for AMC 2 (GRCh37; Figure 1b). The effect size is the change in read depth compared with the expected number of reads, as determined by WISECONDOR.

Figure 1: Noninvasive prenatal testing results showing a deletion starting in 10q25 in eight pregnancies.
figure 1

(a) Initial WISECONDOR output. Data for each sample were analyzed using reference data for the center the sample was processed at. Samples are numbered for each center. (b) Plots showing the results of the enhanced WISECONDOR method applied to three samples with the 10q25.2 deletion. The y axis shows z-scores for every bin shown on the x axis. Numbers within the figures show the z-score of the called region. A chromosomal ideogram is visualized at the bottom of each plot. In all samples, the deletion starts at 10q25.2—the locus containing the FRA10B site (between 113,001,547 and 113,001,987). AMC, Academic Medical Center; EMC, Erasmus Medical Center; RUNMC, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre; VUMC, VU University Medical Center Amsterdam.

To confirm the presence of the deletion in the fetus, routine array analysis was performed on DNA isolated from amniotic fluid in four cases (AMC 1, AMC 2, EMC 2, and EMC 3), but the deletion could not be confirmed in any of them. Placental biopsies were analyzed using FISH analysis with a 10qter-specific probe for AMC 1 (five biopsies from the cytotrophoblast layer and one from the mesenchymal core), or by single nucleotide polymorphism array for EMC 1 (one biopsy from the cytotrophoblast layer and one from the mesenchymal core) and EMC 2 and EMC 3 (both four biopsies from the cytotrophoblast layer and four from the mesenchymal core). Furthermore, the umbilical cord and blood were analyzed from EMC 1. The deletion was not found in any of these samples.

In an effort to explain the deletions, we realized that the breakpoints overlapped exactly with the FRA10E and FRA10B sites on 10q25.2. As the FRA10E site is a common fragile site present in all humans, we focused on FRA10B expansions as a possible cause of the deletions.

Culture of maternal blood lymphocytes with BrdU to induce a possible FRA10B fragile site showed a fragile site on chromosome 10 in all four of the cases tested: AMC 1 (16/26 cells; 61%), AMC 2 (18/30 cells; 60%), EMC 1 (17/30 cells; 57%), and EMC 2 (14/50 cells; 28%) (Figure 2a). We did not detect metaphases with an apparent deletion of 10(q25→ter). When cultured according to standard procedures without BrdU, this fragile site was not expressed in blood lymphocytes.

Figure 2: FRA10B expansions and mosaic maternal deletions.
figure 2

a) GTG banding of chromosome 10 (case Academic Medical Center 1 (AMC 1)) after culture of blood lymphocytes in medium with bromodeoxyuridine to induce bromodeoxyuridine-sensitive fragile sites. The fragile site at 10q25 is indicated by an arrow. (b) Array comparative genomic hybridization analysis of chromosome 10 of AMC 1 shows a low-grade mosaic loss of 10q25→qter (breakpoint indicated by an arrow). The log ratio of this deleted region is –0.083.

Additional FISH analysis on interphase nuclei of maternal blood lymphocytes cultured with BrdU in 2 cases showed a loss of signal for the 10q telomere in 7 of 203 nuclei in AMC 1 (3.4%) and in 6 of 198 nuclei in AMC 2 (3.3%), whereas a loss of signal for the 10p telomere was not observed in any of the nuclei. These FISH results suggested that carriers of FRA10B may exhibit low-level mosaicism for a 10q terminal deletion. To test this, in-depth array comparative genomic hybridization analysis was performed on DNA extracted from whole blood of the two AMC cases. This finding was confirmed in AMC 1, for which a mosaic deletion, distal from FRA10B, of approximately 11% was identified (Figure 2b). No deletion could be detected in AMC 2, nor in EMC 2 and 3. As FRA10B is not associated with any clinical phenotype, we did not test the carrier status of the fetuses after birth.

Discussion

Aberrations found by NIPS are not always of fetal origin, resulting in false-positive NIPS reports. Known examples of confounding factors are confined placental mosaics, maternal copy-number variants, and maternal malignancies. Knowledge of these factors is essential in proper NIPS analysis and counseling. Here, we describe an additional biological cause of discordant NIPS results. We tested and confirmed FRA10B expansions in four mothers where NIPS showed a 10q25-to-telomere deletion. Initial FISH analysis showed the presence of a maternal low mosaic 10(q25→ter) deletion in one case, probably as a consequence of the expanded fragile site. As the sensitivity of FISH analysis is insufficient to confirm or exclude very-low-grade mosaic deletions, we confirmed this finding using array analysis. As approximately 90% of the cell-free DNA tested during NIPS is maternal, this low maternal mosaic can be detected during NIPS analysis. The fact that the deletion was not seen in the peripheral blood of the other three cases of maternal FRA10B is probably due to mosaicism below the detection level of array. This does not exclude its presence in the maternal cell-free DNA fraction. FRA10B expression is induced by cellular stress. As cell-free DNA is derived from apoptotic cells it might even be enriched for the associated deletion. Assuming the occurrence rate for FRA10B is 2.5%, as stated in previous work, the odds of finding four out of four individuals with FRA10B at random is ~3.9  ×  10–7 (0.0254), making our observation statistically significant at the usual significance threshold (P < 0.05).

There is ongoing debate as to whether NIPS should be targeted to trisomy 21, 18, and 13 alone, or whether it should be used as genome-wide screening to detect other chromosomal anomalies as well. Although the clear benefit of genome-wide testing is that more severe fetal anomalies will be detected,14 one of the arguments against it is that it will result in more false-positive results and therefore more invasive follow-up tests. However, many of these false-positive results can easily be identified and explained without the need for invasive follow-up testing. In the case of maternal copy-number variants causing false-positive results, we have argued that, with the use of proper bioinformatical tools, it is easy to distinguish maternal copy-number variants from fetal trisomies. The same is true for maternal malignancies.16 Here, we identify another example of a relatively common cause of false-positive results that does not warrant follow-up by invasive testing. If a deletion starting exactly at FRA10B is found (Figure 1), it is highly likely that it is caused by a maternal mosaic deletion associated with a repeat expansion at this fragile site. This repeat expansion can be confirmed by maternal testing if preferred, although there is no known phenotype linked to this fragile site, even in homozygous carriers. The frequency at which we found the 10qter deletions is ~1 in 1,263, which is much lower than the published carrier frequency of FRA10B expansions of 1 in 40.8 The most likely explanation for this discrepancy is that only in a small proportion of carrier women will FRA10B expansion result in a deletion at sufficiently high mosaic levels to be detected by routine NIPS analysis.

Several rare fragile sites are associated with mosaic deletions.6 We therefore investigated whether more recurrent deletions at fragile sites were observed. Thirty-one rare fragile sites have been described,7 24 of which are folate-sensitive sites consisting of CGG repeats such as the FRAXA repeat which is associated with fragile X syndrome. FRA10B belongs to the group of seven non-folate-sensitive sites consisting of AT-rich repeats. Although we did not detect recurrent deletions at any of these sites, we cannot exclude the possibility that in rare cases other fragile sites might explain false-positive NIPS results. Laboratories performing genome-wide NIPS analysis should be aware of this. Overall, this finding increases the reliability and health benefits obtained through NIPS. It also proves that classical cytogenetic knowledge is still very important for the proper interpretation of NIPS results, as the last scientific paper on FRA10B dates from 2003.17