Absence of constitutional Y chromosome AZF deletions in patients with testicular germ cell tumors.
نویسندگان
چکیده
OBJECTIVES To investigate the frequency of azoospermia factor (AZF) deletions in Dutch patients with testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs). Reduced fertility is associated with TGCTs and reduced fertility and TGCTs might share genetic risk factors according to the testicular dysgenesis hypothesis. Up to 8% of infertility and reduced fertility in the general male population can be explained by the presence of constitutional deletions of part of the long arm of the Y chromosome (Yq11), referred to as the AZF region. METHODS In 112 patients with TGCT, screening for constitutional deletions in the AZF region was performed by multiplex polymerase chain reaction analysis in DNA extracted from peripheral blood lymphocytes. A set of 24 primer pairs, of which 20 primer pairs are homologous to previously identified and mapped sequenced tag sites within the AZF region were used. RESULTS No deletions in the Yq11 region were detected in any of the 112 patients. CONCLUSIONS Large Y chromosome microdeletions in the AZF region are not a major contributor to the development of TGCT and TGCT-associated reduced fertility.
منابع مشابه
No AZF deletion in 160 patients with testicular germ cell neoplasia.
Testicular germ cell cancer is aetiologically linked to genital malformations and male infertility and is most probably caused by a disruption of embryonic programming and gonadal development during fetal life. In some cases, germ cell neoplasia is associated with a relative reduction of Y chromosomal material (e.g. 45,X/46,XY) or other abnormalities of the Y chromosome. The euchromatic long ar...
متن کاملSUBMICROSCOPIC DELETIONS OF THE Y CHROMOSOME ARE NOT LIMITED TO AZOOSPERMIC MEN, BUT ARE ALSO DETECTED IN INFERTILE MEN WITH IDIOPATHIC OLIGOZOOSPERMIA
It is now agreed that 10-25% of infertile men with azoospermia have submicroscopic deletions of the Y chromosome long ann (yq), consistent with the proposed location of the azoospermia locus (AZF) in Yq 11.23. However, it is not known whether Yq microdeletions are unique to men with azoospermia or whether they are also observed in infertile men with less severe defects of spermatogenesis (o...
متن کاملI-6: Azoospermia Factor in Male Infertility
Background The human Y chromosome is essential for human sex determination and male germ cell development and maintenance. In 1996, Vogt et al. identified three recurrently deleted regions in Yq11 termed the azoospermia factor (AZF). The AZF region is subdivided into three non-overlapping sub-regions called AZFa, AZFb and AZFc and microdeletion in these regions is the most important etiology of...
متن کاملY chromosome haplogroups and susceptibility to testicular cancer.
Although in the past decades much progress in testicular cancer (TC) management has been made, little is known about the possible genetic causes and molecular mechanisms involved in its aetiopathogenesis. Some studies on possible contribution of the Y chromosome in TC development have been previously published, but data are not conclusive. In particular, ethnic influence and spermatogenic activ...
متن کاملO-1: Evaluation of Ethnic Patterns of Y Chromosome Microdeletions in Iranian Infertile Men with Azoospermia/Severe Oligospermia Referred to Royan Institute
Background: Microdeletions of the long arm of the chromosome Y are the most common molecular genetic cause of severe infertility in men which affect three regions of AZFa, AZFb and AZFc (Azoospermia factor). These regions contain various genes involved in spermatogenesis. The effect of ethnicity on the patterns of Y chromosome microdeletions has not been extensively studied, particulary in Iran...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Urology
دوره 65 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005