Kent-First M G, Kol S, Muallem A, Ofir R, Manor D, Blazer S, First N, Itskovitz-Eldor J
Promega Corp., Madison, WI 53711, USA.
Mol Hum Reprod. 1996 Dec;2(12):943-50. doi: 10.1093/molehr/2.12.943.
Microdeletions linked to deletion intervals 5 and 6 of the Y chromosome have been associated with male factor infertility. Members from at least two gene families lie in the region containing azoospermia factor (AZF), namely YRRM and DAZ. With the advent of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), it is possible for men with severe male factor infertility to produce a child. The genetic consequences of such a procedure have been questioned. This report describes the first study of a population (32 couples) of infertile fathers and their sons born after ICSI. The objectives were firstly to determine the incidence and map location of Y chromosome microdeletions and to compare the frequencies with other population studies involving severe male factor infertility, and secondly to formulate a working hypothesis concerning developmental aetiology of Y chromosome microdeletions. The incidence of microdeletions in the ICSI population was shown to be 9.4% (within the range 9-18% reported for populations of severe male factor infertility patients). Microdeletions in two out of three affected father/son pairs mapped in the region between AZFb and AZFc and the third involved a large microdeletion in AZFb and AZFc. Of three affected father/son pairs, microdeletions were detected in the blood of one infertile propositus father and three babies. Assuming that the gonomes of the ICSI-derived babies are direct reflections of those of their fathers germ lines, it is possible that two of three infertile fathers were mosaic for intact Y and microdeleted Y chromosomes. In such cases, the developmental aetiology of the microdeletion may be due to a de-novo microdeletion arising as a post-zygotic mitotic error in the infertile propositus father, thus producing a mosaic individual who may or may not transmit the deletion to his ICSI-derived sons depending on the extent of primordial germ cell mosaicism. In one of three affected fathers, the microdeletion detected in his blood was also detected in his ICSI-derived son. In this case the de-novo event giving rise to the microdeletion may have occurred due to a post- (or pre-) meiotic error in the germ line of this father's normally fertile father (i.e. the ICSI-derived baby's grandfather).
与Y染色体5号和6号缺失区间相关的微缺失与男性因素不育有关。至少两个基因家族的成员位于包含无精子症因子(AZF)的区域,即YRRM和DAZ。随着卵胞浆内单精子注射(ICSI)技术的出现,重度男性因素不育的男性有可能生育孩子。但这一技术的遗传后果受到了质疑。本报告描述了对一组(32对夫妇)不育父亲及其通过ICSI技术出生的儿子的首次研究。目的一是确定Y染色体微缺失的发生率和图谱位置,并与其他涉及重度男性因素不育的人群研究进行频率比较;二是就Y染色体微缺失的发育病因学提出一个可行的假设。ICSI人群中微缺失的发生率为9.4%(在重度男性因素不育患者人群报告的9%-18%范围内)。三对受影响的父子对中有两对的微缺失定位于AZFb和AZFc之间的区域,第三对涉及AZFb和AZFc的大片段微缺失。在三对受影响的父子对中,在一名不育先证者父亲和三个婴儿的血液中检测到了微缺失。假设ICSI出生婴儿的基因组直接反映了其父亲生殖系的基因组,那么三分之二的不育父亲可能是完整Y染色体和微缺失Y染色体的嵌合体。在这种情况下,微缺失的发育病因可能是不育先证者父亲在合子后有丝分裂错误产生的新生微缺失,从而产生一个嵌合体个体,根据原始生殖细胞嵌合的程度,他可能会也可能不会将缺失遗传给他通过ICSI出生的儿子。在三分之一受影响的父亲中,在他血液中检测到的微缺失在其通过ICSI出生的儿子中也被检测到。在这种情况下,导致微缺失的新生事件可能是由于这位父亲(即ICSI出生婴儿的祖父)生殖系减数分裂后(或前)的错误。