AI Article Synopsis

  • Many couples in Western countries rely on medical help for pregnancy, with over 2% of births resulting from assisted reproductive technologies.
  • A study focused on a specific infertility condition, total globozoospermia, found that 75% of the patients had a deletion in a gene called DPY19L2, which is important for sperm development.
  • This discovery allows for a molecular diagnosis in men with globozoospermia, confirming the condition and indicating a lower chance of success with in vitro fertilization.

Article Abstract

An increasing number of couples require medical assistance to achieve a pregnancy, and more than 2% of the births in Western countries now result from assisted reproductive technologies. To identify genetic variants responsible for male infertility, we performed a whole-genome SNP scan on patients presenting with total globozoospermia, a primary infertility phenotype characterized by the presence of 100% round acrosomeless spermatozoa in the ejaculate. This strategy allowed us to identify in most patients (15/20) a 200 kb homozygous deletion encompassing only DPY19L2, which is highly expressed in the testis. Although there was no known function for DPY19L2 in humans, previous work indicated that its ortholog in C. elegans is involved in cell polarity. In man, the DPY19L2 region has been described as a copy-number variant (CNV) found to be duplicated and heterozygously deleted in healthy individuals. We show here that the breakpoints of the deletions are located on a highly homologous 28 kb low copy repeat (LCR) sequence present on each side of DPY19L2, indicating that the identified deletions were probably produced by nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR) between these two regions. We demonstrate that patients with globozoospermia have a homozygous deletion of DPY19L2, thus indicating that DPY19L2 is necessary in men for sperm head elongation and acrosome formation. A molecular diagnosis can now be proposed to affected men; the presence of the deletion confirms the diagnosis of globozoospermia and assigns a poor prognosis for the success of in vitro fertilization.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3059422PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2011.02.007DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The research investigates whether genome-wide genotyping can help identify the genetic causes behind total globozoospermia in two brothers from a non-consanguineous family.
  • The study involved clinical assessments, sperm analysis, and molecular testing to explore the presence of genetic mutations, particularly focusing on the DPY19L2 gene.
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