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Lecture 35. genetic prenatal diagnosis and gene therapy

Genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis

Present-day medicine recognizes that genetic diseases are inherited based on the nature of DNA, genes , and chromosomes . Now that the human genome has been completely sequenced, scientists are better able to study how changes in DNA cause human disease. This will ultimately help in diagnosing and treating genetic disorders.However, until science has the knowledge to treat some of the more serious, sometimes fatal genetic disorders, the best option is prevention. Prevention of genetically transmitted diseases can consist of major choices: abstinence from pregnancy, egg or sperm donation, preimplantation or prenatal diagnosis and termination, or early treatment of affected pregnancies.

Prenatal diagnosis involves testing fetal cells, amniotic fluid , or amniotic membranes to detect fetal abnormalities. Preimplantation diagnosis is a new technique only available in specialized centers. It involves in vitro fertilization and genetic testing of the resulting embryos prior to implanting only those embryos found not to have the abnormal gene.

Genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis provides parents with the knowledge to make intelligent, informed decisions regarding possible pregnancy and its outcome. Based on genetic counseling, some parents (in the face of possibly lethal genetic disease) have forgone pregnancy and adopted children while others have opted for egg or sperm donation from an anonymous donor who is not likely to be a carrier of the specific disease.

Many diseases transmitted as a single gene defect can now be diagnosed very early in pregnancy. Because of this some parents choose to become pregnant and have the disease status of the fetus determined early in the pregnancy. The pregnancy is continued if the fetus is disease-free. Parents who decide to continue the pregnancy with a defective fetus may be able to better prepare to care for the infant by being informed about the disease in advance. For example, genetic diseases that have a diet intolerance component may be treated with specialized diets for the mother and newborn baby.

Gene therapy: somatic and germline gene therapy

Somatic cell gene therapy

Many genetic diseases may be able to be treated with gene therapy to correct the defective genes.

Gene therapy is a therapeutic technique in which a functioning gene is inserted into the cells of a patient to correct an inborn genetic error or to provide a new function to the cell. It means the genetic modification of DNA in the body cells of an individual patient, directed to alleviating disease in that patient.

There have been several hundred human gene therapy clinical trials for several different diseases (including several cancers) in many countries (including the USA, EU, Canada, China, Japan, New Zealand...), and involving over 6000 patients world-wide.

Somatic cell gene therapy involves injection of 'healthy genes' into somatic (body) cells of a patient. The DNA change is not inherited to children.

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Source:  OpenStax, Genetics. OpenStax CNX. Jul 29, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10782/1.1
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