HSFY genes and the P4 palindrome in the AZFb interval of the human Y chromosome are not required for spermatocyte maturation.

نویسندگان

  • Elsa Kichine
  • Virginie Rozé
  • Julie Di Cristofaro
  • Daniel Taulier
  • André Navarro
  • Eric Streichemberger
  • Fanny Decarpentrie
  • Catherine Metzler-Guillemain
  • Nicolas Lévy
  • Jacques Chiaroni
  • Veronique Paquis-Flucklinger
  • Florence Fellmann
  • Michael J Mitchell
چکیده

BACKGROUND Recurrent AZFb deletions on the human Y chromosome are associated with an absence of ejaculated spermatozoa consequent to a meiotic maturation arrest that prevents the progression of germ cells to haploid stages. The extreme rarity of partial deletions has hampered the identification of the AZFb genes required for normal meiotic stages. The critical interval, refined by two overlapping deletions associated with full spermatogenesis (AZFc and b1/b3), measures over 4 Mb and contains 13 coding genes: CDY2, XKRY, HSFY1, HSFY2, CYORF15A, CYORF15B, KDM5D, EIF1AY, RPS4Y2 and four copies of RBMY. METHODS AND RESULTS We screened 1186 men from infertile couples for Y chromosome deletions, and identified three unrelated oligozoospermic men and one azoospermic man who carry an identical 768 kb deletion resulting in loss of the entire P4 palindrome, including both HSFY genes, the only coding genes within the deletion interval. This 768 kb deletion was not found in 1179 control men. The deletion breakpoints share only 4 bp of nucleotide identity, revealing that the deletions are not recurrent, but are descendants of a founding deletion. Confirming this, we find that all four men carry a Y chromosome of the same highly defined haplogroup (R1b1b1a1b) (incidence 30% in Southern France), although further haplotype analyses showed that they were not closely related. CONCLUSIONS Although the HSFY deletion is restricted to our infertile group, it has been transmitted naturally over many generations, indicating that HSFY genes make only a slight contribution to male fertility. Importantly, our study formally excludes HSFY genes as the AZFb factor required for progression through meiosis.

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منابع مشابه

Characterization of HSFY, a novel AZFb gene on the Y chromosome with a possible role in human spermatogenesis.

HSFY (heat shock transcription factor, Y chromosome) has been mapped in the AZFb region of the Y chromosome, whose deletion results in severe male infertility. HSFY belongs to the heat shock factor family that has been shown to be implicated in spermatogenesis both in animals and humans. We report the characterization of the genomic structure, the number of copies on the Y chromosome and the ex...

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Human reproduction

دوره 27 2  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2012