Jindrich Doucha
Charles University in Prague
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Featured researches published by Jindrich Doucha.
Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2011
Katerina Kotlabova; Jindrich Doucha; Ilona Hromadnikova
The goal of this study was to identify placental specific microRNAs present in maternal plasma that differentiate between women with normal pregnancies and nonpregnant individuals. The selection of appropriate pregnancy-associated microRNAs with diagnostic potential was based on the following criteria: (1) detection rate of 100% in full-term placentas, (2) detection rate of ≥ 67% in maternal plasma throughout gestation (at least four positive wells out of six tested wells) and (3) not detectable in whole peripheral blood and plasma samples of nonpregnant individuals. Initially, we tested microRNAs (miR-34c, miR-372, miR-135b and miR-518b), which had been previously identified as pregnancy-associated microRNAs. Additionally, we selected 16 other highly specific placental microRNAs (miR-512-5p, miR-515-5p, miR-224, miR-516-5p, miR-517*, miR-136, miR-518f*, miR-519a, miR-519d, miR-519e, miR-520a*, miR-520h, miR-524-5p, miR-525, miR-526a, and miR-526b) from the miRNAMap database. Seven microRNAs (miR-516-5p, miR-517*, miR-518b, miR-520a*, miR-520h, miR-525 and miR-526a) were identified as new pregnancy associated microRNAs with diagnostic potential. Their levels in maternal plasma during the 36th week of gestation corresponded to 45.0-427.0 pg of total RNA (enriched for small RNAs) per milliliter of maternal plasma.
The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2012
Ilona Hromadnikova; Katerina Kotlabova; Jindrich Doucha; Klara Dlouha; Ladislav Krofta
Placental insufficiency-related complications are one of the leading causes of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality. This study investigated the quantification of placenta-specific microRNAs (miRNAs) in the maternal circulation during gestation in a cohort of women with normally progressing pregnancies, the differentiation between placental insufficiency-related complications and normally progressing pregnancies, and the differentiation between placental insufficiency and normally progressing pregnancies during the early stages of gestation. Both absolute and relative quantification of placenta-specific miRNAs (ie, miR-516-5p, miR-517*, miR-518b, miR-520a*, miR-520h, miR-525, and miR-526a) was determined in 50 women with normally progressing pregnancies, 32 with complicated pregnancies [21 with preeclampsia with or without intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) and 11 with IUGR], and 7 women with pregnancies at various gestational stages who later developed preeclampsia and/or IUGR using real-time PCR and a comparative C(T) method relative to normalization factor (ie, geometric mean of ubiquitous miR-16 and let-7d). Both quantification approaches revealed significant increases in extracellular placenta-specific miRNA levels over time in women with normally progressing pregnancies; however, they were not able to differentiate between normally progressing and complicated pregnancies at the time of preeclampsia and/or IUGR onset. Nevertheless, significant elevation of extracellular miRNA levels was observed during early gestation (ie, within the 12th to 16th weeks) in pregnancies with later onset of preeclampsia and/or IUGR. Early gestation extracellular miRNA screening can differentiate between women with normally progressing pregnancies and those who may later develop placental insufficiency-related complications.
Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2005
Ilona Hromadnikova; Lenka Vechetova; Klara Vesela; Blanka Benesova; Jindrich Doucha; R. Vlk
We assessed the feasibility of fetal RHD and RHCE genotyping by analysis of DNA extracted from plasma samples of RhD-negative pregnant women using real-time PCR and primers and probes targeted toward RHD and RHCE genes. We analyzed 45 pregnant women in the 11th to 40th weeks of pregnancy and correlated the results with serological analysis of cord blood after delivery. Non-invasive prenatal fetal RHD exon 7, RHD exon 10, RHCE exon 2 (C allele), and RHCE exon 5 (E allele) genotyping analysis of maternal plasma samples was correctly performed in 45 out of 45 RhD-negative pregnant women delivering 24 RhD-, 17 RhC-, and 7 RhE-positive newborns. Detection of fetal RHD and the C and E alleles of RHCE gene from maternal plasma is highly accurate and enables implementation into clinical routine. We recommend performing fetal RHD and RHCE genotyping together with fetal sex determination in alloimmunized D-negative pregnancies at risk of hemolytic disease of the newborn. In case of D-negative fetus, amplification of another paternally inherited allele (SRY and/or RhC and/or RhE positivity) proves the presence of fetal DNA in maternal circulation.
Mediators of Inflammation | 2013
Ilona Hromadnikova; Katerina Kotlabova; Marketa Ondrackova; Andrea Kestlerová; Veronika Novotna; Lucie Hympanova; Jindrich Doucha; Ladislav Krofta
The objective of the study was to identify the profile of circulating C19MC microRNAs (miR-516-5p, miR-517∗, miR-518b, miR-520a∗, miR-520h, miR-525, and miR-526a) in patients with established preeclampsia (n = 63), fetal growth restriction (n = 27), and gestational hypertension (n = 23). We examined the correlation between plasmatic concentrations and expression levels of microRNAs and the severity of the disease with respect to clinical signs, requirements for the delivery, and Doppler ultrasound parameters. Using absolute and relative quantification approaches, increased extracellular C19MC microRNA levels (miR-516-5p, P = 0.037, P = 0.009; miR-517∗, P = 0.033, P = 0.043; miR-520a∗, P = 0.001, P = 0.009; miR-525, P = 0.026, P = 0.01; miR-526a, P = 0.03, P = 0.035) were detected in patients with preeclampsia. The association analysis pointed to no relationship between C19MC microRNA plasmatic concentrations and expression profile and identified risk factors for a poorer perinatal outcome. However, the dependence between the levels of plasmatic C19MC microRNAs and the pulsatility index in the middle cerebral artery and the values of cerebroplacental ratio was demonstrated. The study brought the interesting finding that the upregulation of miR-516-5p, miR-517∗, miR-520a∗, miR-525, and miR-526a is a characteristic phenomenon of established preeclampsia.
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2002
Ilona Hromadnikova; Bela Houbova; Dana Hridelova; Sona Voslarova; Pavel Calda; Katerina Nekolarova; Josef Kofer; David Stejskal; Jindrich Doucha; Ondrej Cinek; Jan Vavrirec
BackgroundWe investigated fetal and total DNA levels in maternal plasma in patients bearing fetuses affected with Down syndrome in comparison to controls carrying fetuses with normal karyotype.MethodsDNA levels in maternal plasma were measured using real-time quantitative PCR using SRY and β-globin genes as markers. Twenty-one pregnant women with a singleton fetus at a gestational age ranging from 15 to 19 weeks recruited before amniocentesis (carried out for reasons including material serum screening and advanced material age), and 16 pregnant women bearing fetuses affected with Down syndrome between 17 to 22 weeks of gestation were involved in the study.ResultsThe specificity of the system reaches 100% (no Y signal was detected in 14 women pregnant with female fetuses) and the sensitivity 91.7% (SRY amplification in 22 of 24 examined samples). The median fetal DNA levels in women carrying Down syndrome (n=11) and the controls (n=13) were 23.3 (range 0–58.5) genome-equivalents/ml and 24.5 (range 0–47.5) genome-equivalents/ml of maternal plasma, respectively (P = 0.62). The total median DNA levels in pregnancies with Down syndrome and the controls were 10165 (range 615–65000) genome-equivalents/ml and 7330 (range 1300–36750) genome-equivalents/ml, respectively (P = 0.32). The fetal DNA proportion in maternal plasma was 0%-6 % (mean 0.8%) in women carrying Down syndrome and 0%-2.6 % (mean 0.7 %) in the controls, respectively (P=0.86).ConclusionsOur study revealed no difference in fetal DNA levels and fetal DNA: maternal DNA ratio between the patients carrying Down syndrome fetuses and the controls.
Fetal Diagnosis and Therapy | 2005
Ilona Hromadnikova; Lenka Vechetova; Klara Vesela; Blanka Benesova; Jindrich Doucha; Eduard Kulovany; R. Vlk
Objective: In this prospective study, we assessed the feasibility of foetal RHD genotyping by analysis of DNA extracted from plasma samples of Rhesus (Rh) D-negative pregnant women using real-time PCR and primers and probes targeted toward exon 7 and 10 of RHD gene. Methods: We analysed 24 RhD-negative pregnant woman and 4 patients with weak D phenotypes at a gestational age ranging from 11th to 38th week of gestation and correlated the results with serological analysis of cord blood after the delivery. Results: Non-invasive prenatal foetal RHD exon 7 genotyping analyses of maternal plasma samples was in complete concordance with the serological analysis of cord blood in all 24 RhD-negative pregnant women delivering 12 RhD-positive and 12 RhD-negative newborns. RHD exon-10-specific PCR amplicons were not detected in 2 out of 12 studied plasma samples from women bearing RhD-positive foetus, despite the positive amplification in RHD exon 7 region observed in all cases. In 1 case red cell serology of cord blood revealed that the mother had D–C–E–c+e+ Cw– and the infant D+C–E–c+e+ Cw+ phenotypes. RhD exon 10 real-time PCR analysis of cord blood was also negative. These findings may reflect that DCw– paternally inherited haplotype probably possesses no RHD exon 10. In another case no cord blood sample has been available for additional studies. The specificity of both RHD exon 7 and 10 systems approached 100% since no RhD-positive signals were detected in women currently pregnant with RhD-negative foetus (n = 8). Using real-time PCR and DNA isolated from maternal plasma, we easily differentiated pregnant woman whose RBCs had a weak D phenotype (n = 4) from truly RhD-negative patients since the threshold cycle (CT) for RHD exon 10 or 7 amplicons reached nearly the same value like CT for control β-globin gene amplicons detecting the total DNA present in maternal plasma. However in these cases foetal RhD status cannot be determined.Conclusion:Prediction offoetal RhD status from maternal plasma is highly accurate and enables implementation into clinical routine. We suggest that safe non-invasive prenatal foetal RHD genotyping using maternal plasma should involve the amplification of at least two RHD-specific products.
DNA and Cell Biology | 2010
Ilona Hromadnikova; Lenka Zejskova; Katerina Kotlabova; Tereza Jancuskova; Jindrich Doucha; Klara Dlouha; Ladislav Krofta; Jan E. Jirasek; R. Vlk
This study evaluated quantification of fetal extracellular DNA in maternal plasma for differentiation between cases at risk of onset of placental-insufficiency-related complications and normal pregnancies. Using real-time polymerase chain reaction, fetal (sex-determining region Y [SRY] and hypermethylated RASSF1A sequence) and total (beta-globin [GLO] gene) extracellular DNA was examined in 70 normal pregnancies, 18 at risk of placental-insufficiency-related pregnancy complications, 24 preeclampsia with or without (w or w/o) intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) (median 34.0 week), and 11 IUGR (median 28.5 week). IUGR was diagnosed when estimated fetal weight was below the 10th percentile for evaluated gestational age. Although increased levels of extracellular DNA were detected in pregnancies with preeclampsia w or w/o IUGR relative to controls (RASSF1A, p < 0.001; SRY, p = 0.009; GLO, p < 0.001), quantities of fetal extracellular DNA in IUGR were not statistically significant (RASSF1A, p = 0.21; SRY, p = 0.2). RASSF1A, SRY, and GLO achieved 93.1%, 93.6%, and 92.1% accuracy for differentiation between normal pregnancy and preeclampsia w or w/o IUGR. Lower sensitivity was observed for pregnancies with onset of IUGR (RASSF1A, 60.0%; SRY, 80.0%; GLO, 72.7%), but did not influence final accuracy (RASSF1A, 91.6%; SRY, 92.5%; GLO, 89.5%). Among 18 patients at risk, 8 pregnancies involving 3 female and 5 male fetuses developed preeclampsia (n = 4), IUGR (n = 3), and chronic placentopathy causing hypoxia (n = 1). Elevation of extracellular DNA was demonstrated in 3/5 (SRY), 1/8 (hypermethylated RASSF1A), and 4/8 (GLO) patients at the earliest 26 weeks and at the latest 2 weeks before the onset of symptoms. These data indicate that fetal and total extracellular DNA concentrations can be significantly elevated in plasma of patients who later developed placental-insufficiency-related pregnancy complications. However, this is strongly individualized, and not a rule for all cases, and probably depends on the actual occurrence of excessive placental trophoblast apoptosis.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Ilona Hromadnikova; Katerina Kotlabova; Lucie Hympanova; Jindrich Doucha; Ladislav Krofta
Objective The objective of the study was to evaluate risk assessment for gestational hypertension based on the profile of circulating placental specific C19MC microRNAs in early pregnancy. Study design The prospective longitudinal cohort study of women enrolled at first trimester screening at 10 to 13 weeks was carried out (n = 267). Relative quantification of placental specific C19MC microRNAs (miR-516-5p, miR-517*, miR-518b, miR-520a*, miR-520h, miR-525 and miR-526a) was determined in 28 normal pregnancies and 18 pregnancies which developed gestational hypertension using real-time PCR and a comparative Ct method relative to synthetic C. elegans microRNA (cel-miR-39). Results Increased extracellular C19MC microRNA plasmatic levels (miR-516-5p, p<0.001; miR-517*, p = 0.007; miR-520h, p<0.001; miR-518b, p = 0.002) were detected in patients destined to develop gestational hypertension. MiR-520h had the best predictive performance with a PPV of 84.6% at a 7.1% false positive rate. The combination of miR-520h and miR-518b was able to predict 82.6% of women at the same false positive rate. The overall predictive capacity of single miR-518b (73.3% at 14.3% FPR), miR-516-5p (70.6% at 17.9% FPR) and miR-517* (57.9% at 28.6% FPR) biomarkers was lower. Conclusion The study brought interesting finding that the up-regulation of miR-516-5p, miR-517*, miR-520h and miR-518b is associated with a risk of later development of gestational hypertension. First trimester screening of extracellular miR-520h alone or in combination with miR-518b identified a significant proportion of women with subsequent gestational hypertension.
Experimental and Molecular Pathology | 2010
Lenka Zejskova; T. Jancuskova; Katerina Kotlabova; Jindrich Doucha; Ilona Hromadnikova
We determined the feasibility of universal fetal marker detection in maternal circulation. Using real-time PCR, we compared the levels of fetal (SRY and hypermethylated RASSF1A) and total (GLO gene and total RASSF1A) extracellular DNA and fractions of extracellular fetal DNA (SRY/GLO vs. hypermethylated RASSF1A/total RASSF1A) in maternal circulation. Sensitivity and specificity reached 100% as the fetal-specific hypermethylated RASSF1A sequence was detected in all 151 examined plasma samples derived from 70 normal pregnancies with a singleton male (n=51) or female (n=19) fetus sampled throughout gestation and absent in non-pregnant individuals (n=29). A strong positive correlation was observed between fetal-derived hypermethylated RASSF1A and SRY (ρ=0.66, P<0.001), total RASSF1A and GLO (ρ=0.65,P<0.001), SRY/GLO vs. hypermethylated RASSF1A/total RASSF1A ratio (ρ=0.62, P<0.001) in maternal plasma. The results indicate that a universal fetal marker could be useful not only for the confirmation of the presence of fetal cell-free DNA in maternal plasma but could enable quantification of cell-free fetal DNA in pregnancy associated disorders, independently of the sex of the fetus.
DNA and Cell Biology | 2009
Ilona Hromadnikova; Martina Benesova; Lenka Zejskova; Jana Stehnova; Jindrich Doucha; Petr Sedlacek; Klara Dlouha; Ladislav Krofta
The aims of our research involved to investigate DYS-14 copy number variations in healthy males, to quantify extracellular DNA in maternal circulation in normal versus complicated pregnancies, and to study variations in the DYS-14 copy number in extracellular male fetal DNA. Fifty-five healthy males, 43 uncomplicated male singleton pregnancies (23 sampled at the 16th week and 20 sampled at the 36th week), and 15 pregnancies with placental insufficiency (PI)-related complications (mean 34.1 weeks) were analyzed using real-time PCR with DYS-14 sequence, sex determining region Y (SRY), and beta-globin (GLO) genes used as markers. Increased levels of extracellular DNA were detected in PI-related complications relative to gestational age-matched controls (SRY, p < 0.001; DYS-14, p = 0.007; GLO, p < 0.001). When the mean + 2SD (standard deviation) of controls was used as a cutoff, SRY, DYS-14, and GLO achieved 91.7%, 68.8%, and 94.4% accuracy, respectively, for differentiation between normal and complicated pregnancies. Considerable variations in the DYS-14 copy number in healthy males (mean 52.6) and extracellular DNA were found. A lower DYS-14 copy number was observed in PI-related complications (mean 83.5) compared to uncomplicated pregnancies (16th week: mean 114.2, p = 0.02; 36th week: mean 142.8, p = 0.04). The DYS-14 copy number was higher in extracellular DNA throughout gestation relative to healthy males. We concluded that, regarding interindividual copy number variations, the DYS-14 sequence is not an optimal marker for extracellular fetal DNA quantification for differentiation between normal and complicated pregnancies.