Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Jack Wagner Reflects on The Masked Singer’s ‘Proper Tribute’ to Ozzy Osbourne With Kelly Osbourne (Exclusive)

Jack Wagner Reflects on The Masked Singer’s ‘Proper Tribute’ to Ozzy Osbourne With Kelly Osbourne (Exclusive)

March 5, 2026
Tua Tagovailoa celebrates 28th birthday with wife with NFL future uncertain

Tua Tagovailoa celebrates 28th birthday with wife with NFL future uncertain

March 5, 2026
Chinese EV maker claims it’s engineered the world’s first semi-solid-state EV battery with huge 620-mile range

Chinese EV maker claims it’s engineered the world’s first semi-solid-state EV battery with huge 620-mile range

March 5, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Jack Wagner Reflects on The Masked Singer’s ‘Proper Tribute’ to Ozzy Osbourne With Kelly Osbourne (Exclusive)
  • Tua Tagovailoa celebrates 28th birthday with wife with NFL future uncertain
  • Chinese EV maker claims it’s engineered the world’s first semi-solid-state EV battery with huge 620-mile range
  • New app alerts users at risk of being filmed with smart glasses
  • House Majority Whip Tom Emmer says Walz, Ellison should face jail time if Minn. fraud was hidden
  • Model Jessica White Says It’s ‘OK’ for Women to Be Bisexual, But Not Men: ‘Double Standards Exist’
  • Why Drew Dalman abruptly retired at 27 after Pro Bowl season
  • 9 ways people have modified their bodies since the dawn of time, from foot binding to castration
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » In a first, study links maternal genes to risk of pregnancy loss
In a first, study links maternal genes to risk of pregnancy loss
Science

In a first, study links maternal genes to risk of pregnancy loss

News RoomBy News RoomFebruary 14, 20262 ViewsNo Comments

A new study is the first to identify genetic variants linked with chromosomal abnormalities that can lead to pregnancy loss.

About half of pregnancy losses in the first trimester are caused by aneuploidy, a condition in which cells have an abnormal number of chromosomes. Studies show that aneuploidy is much more common in egg cells than in sperm cells and that it affects an increasing proportion of a person’s eggs with age.

Aneuploidy in eggs can contribute to infertility and pregnancy loss in women, as well as genetic disorders in children, some of which can cause severe disability or death. But currently, little is understood about the individual factors linked to a greater risk of producing aneuploid eggs and, in turn, aneuploid embryos.


You may like

“I think that’s a big blind spot for our field,” said Rajiv McCoy, an associate professor of biology at Johns Hopkins University. McCoy and colleagues aimed to address this blind spot in a new study, published in January in the journal Nature.

They used clinical genetic testing data from over 139,000 embryos created for in vitro fertilization (IVF) to examine the relationship between maternal genetic variants and the incidence of aneuploid embryos. The dataset included 22,850 mothers, whose ages ranged from about 20 to nearly 56 years old. The average age was about 36 years old, around the age women’s risk of producing aneuploid embryos sharply increases.

“We previously didn’t have any very well-characterized associations between genetic variation in the mother’s genome and risk of producing eggs with aneuploidy,” McCoy told Live Science.

The researchers performed genome-wide association studies, meaning they looked for statistical links between gene variants carried by the study participants and certain traits — in this case, the incidence of aneuploidy. They also analyzed the transcriptome, meaning the RNA inside cells; this genetic cousin of DNA carries instructions for making proteins and can give a snapshot of which genes are active.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

The strongest association identified was with specific versions of SMC1B, a gene for a key protein that helps hold the two halves of chromosomes together. Another significant association was drawn to C14orf39, which helps mediate important interactions between chromosomes as cells divide.

The study provides insight into aneuploidy’s relationship to a process called “crossover recombination,” in which chromosomes exchange chunks of DNA during the formation of an egg or sperm cell. McCoy’s team observed that crossover count — the number of DNA exchanges that happen during this process — was lower in aneuploid embryos. That supported previous findings that linked errors in crossover recombination, which can cause issues with chromosome separation during cell division, to a greater likelihood of aneuploidy.

But the study also uncovered something new about this relationship: The genetic variants tied to aneuploidy risk are also involved in crossover recombination. “The same machinery that’s influencing recombination is the machinery that’s influencing risk of producing these aneuploidies,” McCoy said.


You may like

“This helps us understand how all of these traits are tied together,” said Shai Carmi, a professor of computational and statistical genetics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem who was not involved in the research. “What are the risk factors that make some women have more aneuploidy and, therefore, lower fertility?”

Even for those not experiencing infertility, pregnancy loss is incredibly common.

“About 10% to 20% of clinically recognized pregnancies end in miscarriage,” McCoy said. “But we actually think that about half of all conceptions are lost before birth, many of them very early on in development.”

In uncovering the shared genetic basis underlying both crossover recombination and aneuploidy, this study underscores the fact that crossovers play an essential role in ensuring that the correct number of chromosomes end up in a given egg, so that an eventual pregnancy is viable.

Because each genetic variant tied to aneuploidy can explain only a small part of an individual’s overall risk, it’s too early for these findings to be applied to actual patients. Still, “that doesn’t mean that it’s not possible, in the future, to get better predictions of people’s risk,” McCoy said. “And this provides one clue as to what we should be looking for.”

These findings could also serve as a starting point for further research aimed at developing therapies and diagnostics to help reduce pregnancy loss. That said, McCoy also thinks simply knowing more about the mechanisms behind pregnancy loss is meaningful in itself.

“I personally think that the value of this study is more fundamental,” he said. “It’s helping us understand who we are as humans.”

Carioscia, S. A., Biddanda, A., Starostik, M. R., Tang, X., Hoffmann, E. R., Demko, Z. P., & McCoy, R. C. (2026). Common variation in meiosis genes shapes human recombination and aneuploidy. Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09964-2

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Chinese EV maker claims it’s engineered the world’s first semi-solid-state EV battery with huge 620-mile range

Chinese EV maker claims it’s engineered the world’s first semi-solid-state EV battery with huge 620-mile range

9 ways people have modified their bodies since the dawn of time, from foot binding to castration

9 ways people have modified their bodies since the dawn of time, from foot binding to castration

ZWO SeeStar S50 smart telescope review

ZWO SeeStar S50 smart telescope review

Climate disasters caused societal upheaval 3,000 years ago in China, study of ‘oracle bones’ hints

Climate disasters caused societal upheaval 3,000 years ago in China, study of ‘oracle bones’ hints

Hawke Endurance ED 8×25 binocular review

Hawke Endurance ED 8×25 binocular review

‘Truly extraordinary’: Mega-laser shooting at us from halfway across the universe is the brightest ‘cosmic beacon’ we’ve ever seen

‘Truly extraordinary’: Mega-laser shooting at us from halfway across the universe is the brightest ‘cosmic beacon’ we’ve ever seen

NASA fixes Artemis II rocket for April launch to take astronauts around moon

NASA fixes Artemis II rocket for April launch to take astronauts around moon

Chewed-up orca fins on Russian beach point to cannibalism, and scientists say it may explain why some pods are so tight-knit

Chewed-up orca fins on Russian beach point to cannibalism, and scientists say it may explain why some pods are so tight-knit

Birds are declining faster and faster in 3 US hotspots, new study finds

Birds are declining faster and faster in 3 US hotspots, new study finds

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Tua Tagovailoa celebrates 28th birthday with wife with NFL future uncertain

Tua Tagovailoa celebrates 28th birthday with wife with NFL future uncertain

March 5, 2026
Chinese EV maker claims it’s engineered the world’s first semi-solid-state EV battery with huge 620-mile range

Chinese EV maker claims it’s engineered the world’s first semi-solid-state EV battery with huge 620-mile range

March 5, 2026
New app alerts users at risk of being filmed with smart glasses

New app alerts users at risk of being filmed with smart glasses

March 5, 2026
House Majority Whip Tom Emmer says Walz, Ellison should face jail time if Minn. fraud was hidden

House Majority Whip Tom Emmer says Walz, Ellison should face jail time if Minn. fraud was hidden

March 5, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Model Jessica White Says It’s ‘OK’ for Women to Be Bisexual, But Not Men: ‘Double Standards Exist’

Model Jessica White Says It’s ‘OK’ for Women to Be Bisexual, But Not Men: ‘Double Standards Exist’

March 5, 2026
Why Drew Dalman abruptly retired at 27 after Pro Bowl season

Why Drew Dalman abruptly retired at 27 after Pro Bowl season

March 5, 2026
9 ways people have modified their bodies since the dawn of time, from foot binding to castration

9 ways people have modified their bodies since the dawn of time, from foot binding to castration

March 5, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.