首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 343 毫秒
1.
To examine interindividual differences in sperm chromosome aneuploidy, repeated semen specimens were obtained from a group of ten healthy men, aged 20-21 at the start of the study, and analyzed by multi-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis to determine the frequencies of sperm aneuploidy for chromosomes X, Y, 8, 18 and 21 and of diploidy. Semen samples were obtained three times over a five-year period. Statistical analysis examining the stability of sperm aneuploidy over time by type and chromosome identified two men who consistently exhibited elevated frequencies of sperm aneuploidy (stable variants): one with elevated disomy 18 and one with elevated MII diploidy. Differences among frequencies of aneuploidy by chromosome were also seen. Overall, disomy frequencies were lower for chromosome X, 8 and 18 than for chromosomes 21 or Y and for XY aneuploidy. The frequency of chromosome Y disomy did not differ from XY sperm frequency. Also, the frequency of meiosis I (XY) and II (YY + XX) sex chromosome errors did not differ in haploid sperm, but the frequency of MII errors was lower than MI errors in diploid sperm. Frequencies of sperm aneuploidy were similar between the first sampling period and the second, two years later. However, the frequency of some types of aneuploidy (XY, disomy Y, disomy 8, total autosomal disomies, total diploidy, and subcategories of diploidy) increased significantly between the first sampling period and the last, five years later, while others remained unchanged (disomy X, 21 and 18). These findings confirm inter-chromosome differences in the frequencies of disomy and suggest that some apparently healthy men exhibit consistently elevated frequencies of specific sperm aneuplodies. Furthermore, time/age-related changes in sperm aneuploidy may be detected over as short a period as five years in a repeated-measures study.  相似文献   

2.
Pesticides are some of the most frequently released toxic chemicals into the environment. Exposure to them has been associated with reproductive dysfunction, but the knowledge of the genotoxic risks of these substances is still limited. In vitro and in vivo, many pesticides are shown to induce aneuploidy. Analysis of sperm chromosomes by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with chromosome-specific probes has obtained increasing popularity in genetic toxicology. Sperm-FISH studies on men exposed to pesticides have yielded conflicting results: in men exposed to multiple pesticides during spraying no increased disomy frequencies in sperm were observed, although one study reported an increased rate of sex chromosome nullisomy. In contrast the two studies conducted in pesticide factories showed increased frequencies of sperm aneuploidy in exposed men compared to controls. The available data indicates that at least some of the commonly used pesticides are capable of inducing aneuploidy in human sperm when the exposure level is high enough.  相似文献   

3.
The objective of this research was to develop chromosome-specific probes for use in evaluating aneuploidy in boar spermatozoa through the application of fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technology. A multicolor FISH method was developed to detect aneuploidy in the sperm of boars using DNA probes specific for small regions of chromosomes 1, 10, and Y. The average frequencies of sperm with disomy for chromosomes 1, 10, and Y were 0.075%, 0.067%, and 0.094%, respectively. The incidence of disomy did not differ significantly by chromosome. The average frequencies of diploidy were 0.177% for 1-1-10-10 and 0.022% for Y-Y-10-10. Thus, the incidence of overall diploidy (1-1-10-10) was significantly higher than that of disomy for the chromosomes examined (P < 0.01 for disomy of the autosomes and P < 0.05 for disomy of the Y chromosome). No significant age or breed effects on disomy and diploidy rates and no significant interindividual variations in disomy or diploidy were found. The observed level of numerical chromosome aberrations in pig sperm appear to be within the range of the baseline frequencies reported so far in men.  相似文献   

4.
With increasing availability of drugs for impotence and advanced reproductive technologies for the treatment of subfertility, more men are fathering children at advanced ages. We conducted a study of the chromosomal content of sperm of healthy men aged 24-57 years to (a) determine whether father's age was associated with increasing frequencies of aneuploid sperm including XY, disomy X, disomy Y, disomy 21, and sperm diploidy, and (b) examine the association between the frequencies of disomy 21 and sex-chromosomal aneuploidies. The study group consisted of 38 fathers of boys with Klinefelter syndrome (47, XXY) recruited nationwide, and sperm aneuploidy was assessed using multicolor X-Y-21 sperm FISH ( approximately 10,000 sperm per donor). Paternal age was significantly correlated with the sex ratio of sperm (Y/X; P=.006) and with the frequency of XY sperm (P=.02), with a clear trend with age by decades (P<.006). Compared with fathers in their 20s (who had an average frequency of 7.5 XY sperm per 10,000), the frequencies of XY sperm were 10% higher among fathers in their 30s, 31% higher among those in their 40s, and 160% higher among those in their 50s (95% CI 69%-300%). However, there was no evidence for age effects on frequencies of sperm carrying nullisomy sex; disomies X, Y, or 21; or meiosis I or II diploidies. The frequencies of disomy 21 sperm were significantly associated with sex-chromosomal aneuploidy (P=.04)-in particular, with disomy X (P=.004), but disomy 21 sperm did not preferentially carry either sex chromosome. These findings suggest that older fathers produce higher frequencies of XY sperm, which may place them at higher risk of fathering boys with Klinefelter syndrome, and that age effects on sperm aneuploidy are chromosome specific.  相似文献   

5.
Disomy and diploidy frequencies for autosomes 1–22 and the gonosomes were assessed in 299,442 sperm nuclei from four normal fertile men by chromosome painting. This novel approach allowed us to perform a specific and sensitive detection of each chromosome. A minimum of 5000 sperm nuclei per subject were evaluated for each chromosome by dual colour fluorescence in situ hybridization. The disomy rate proved to be similar for all the autosomes (0.24%) and the diploidy rate varied from 0.12% to 0.15%. No interchromosomal or interindividual differences in the frequency of disomic and diploid sperm nuclei were observed between the four subjects. The mean frequency of XX-, YY- and XY-bearing spermatozoa was estimated to 0.17%, 0.17% and 0.32%, respectively. This strategy constitutes a new approach for detecting aneuploidy in human sperm nuclei and suggests an equal repartition of non-disjunction among chromosomes in male gametes. Received: 7 October 1997 / Accepted: 13 January 1998  相似文献   

6.
Renée Martin 《Chromosoma》1998,107(6-7):523-527
Our studies of human sperm karyotypes and interphase sperm analyzed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) have both yielded estimates of disomy frequencies of approximately 0.1% per chromosome with an overall aneuploidy frequency in human sperm of approximately 5%–6%. However, the distribution of aneuploidy in sperm is not even, as our data from sperm karyotypes and multicolour FISH analyses both demonstrate a significant increase in the frequency of aneuploidy for chromosome 21 and the sex chromosomes. We have studied men at increased risk of sperm chromosomal abnormalities including cancer patients and infertility patients. Testicular cancer patients were studied before and 2–13 years after chemotherapy (CT) with BEP (bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin). Sperm karyotype analysis on 788 sperm demonstrated no significant difference in the frequency of numerical or structural chromosomal abnormalities post-CT vs pre-CT. Similarly, multicolour FISH analysis for chromosomes 1, 12, XX, YY and XY in 161,097 sperm did not detect any significant differences in the frequencies of disomy before and after treatment. However, recent evidence has suggested a significant increase in the frequency of disomy and diploidy during CT. We have found that infertile men, who would be candidates for intracytoplasmic sperm injection, have an increased frequency of chromosomally abnormal sperm karyotypes. Also, FISH analysis for chromosomes 1, 12, 13, 21, XX, YY and XY in 255,613 sperm demonstrated a significant increase in chromosomes 1, 13, 21, and XY disomy in infertile men compared with control donors. Received: 4 July 1998; in revised form: 7 September 1998 / Accepted: 8 September 1998  相似文献   

7.
Many studies have been published establishing the background frequencies of disomic and diploid sperm in normal men by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis, with highly significant variance among the reports. Besides interdonor heterogeneity and differences in the experimental protocols used, the question of inherent differences in chromosome malsegregation and meiotic arrest among different geographic and ethnic groups of donors has been raised. In this study, multicolor FISH analysis was carried out on semen samples from 10 nonsmoking, nondrinking Chinese men from the People's Republic of China. The results were compared to FISH data on 10 nonsmoking, nondrinking Canadians under the same experimental conditions, in the same laboratory. A total of 200,497 sperm was scored in the Chinese donors and compared to 202,320 sperm from Canadian donors. Approximately 10,000 sperm per chromosome probe per donor were analyzed. The mean hybridization efficiency was 99.99%. The frequencies of X-bearing and Y-bearing sperm were not significantly different from the expected 50% for each individual and for the combined data from all donors (49.73% vs. 49.46%, P = 0.3946). The mean disomy frequencies (range) were 0.07% (0.02%-0.12%) for chromosome 13, 0.18% (0.09%-0.19%) for chromosome 21, 0.05% (0. 01%-0.09%) for 24,XX, 0.02% (0.01%-0.06%) for 24,YY, and 0.29% (0. 13%-0.49%) for 24,XY. The mean diploidy frequency (range) was 0.38% (0.22%-0.73%) for 13-21 hybridizations and 0.32% (0.07%-0.70%) for XY hybridizations. Highly significant interdonor heterogeneity was found for diploidy (P = 0.0000) and for XY disomy (P = 0.0011), but no age effect was observed in any category of disomic or diploid sperm. The data reported here show no marked differences in disomy and diploidy frequencies between the mainland Chinese and Canadian groups, if donor heterogeneity is taken into account.  相似文献   

8.
We studied the frequencies of X- and Y-chromosome-bearing sperm, diploidy and disomy for chromosomes 1, 12, X, and Y in sperm from 10 normal men aged 21-52 years, to determine whether there was any relationship between donor age and any of these variables. Multicolor FISH was used to control for lack of probe hybridization and to distinguish diploid sperm from disomic sperm. A minimum of 10,000 sperm per donor was evaluated for each chromosome, for a total of 225,846 sperm studied. Sperm were considered disomic if two fluorescent signals were separated by a minimal distance of one signal domain. The mean frequencies of X- and Y-bearing sperm were 50.1% and 49.0%, respectively; not significantly different from 50%. There was no correlation between paternal age and "sex ratio" in sperm. Similarly, there was no association between the frequency of diploid sperm (mean, .16%; range, .06-.42%) and donor age. For disomy frequencies, there was no relationship between donor age and disomy 12 (mean, .16%; range, .10%-.25%), XX (mean, .07%; range, .03%-.17%), and XY sperm (mean, .16%; range, .08%-.24%). There was a significant increase in the frequency of YY sperm (P = .04; mean, .18%; range, .10%-.43%) and disomy 1 sperm (P = .01; mean, .11%; range, .05%-.18%) with donor age. In summary, our results do not support a correlation between paternal age and sex ratio or diploidy.  相似文献   

9.
Occupational exposure to styrene, a chemical extensively used worldwide, is under investigation for possible detrimental effects on human health, including male reproductive capacity. Aneuploidy in germ cells is the main cause of infertility, abortions and congenital diseases. Fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH), is the most efficient cytogenetic molecular technique to date to analyse numerical alterations of chromosomes in spermatozoa. We investigated the frequencies of aneuploidy and diploidy in individuals occupationally exposed to styrene and in healthy unexposed controls. We performed multicolour FISH, using DNA probes specific for the centromeric regions of sex chromosomes and chromosome 2, in decondensed sperm nuclei of samples with normal semen parameters for a total of 18 styrene-exposed subjects and 13 unexposed controls of the same age range. Exposed individuals had worked for at least 2 years during the last 5 years, and continuously for 6 months, in factories producing reinforced plastics. The incidence of aneuploidy and diploidy for the tested chromosomes did not show a statistically significant difference between workers and controls. The exposure to styrene was associated with increased frequencies of nullisomy for sex chromosomes in the group of non-smokers, although only a limited number of subjects belonged to this sub-group. Considering the whole study population, age was associated with an increased frequency of XX disomy, whereas smoking was associated with meiosis II non-disjunction of sex chromosomes. Overall, confounding factors appeared to exert a more important effect than exposure to styrene on numerical chromosome alterations in sperm nuclei of subjects selected for normal semen parameters.  相似文献   

10.
Repeated semen specimens from healthy men were analyzed by sperm fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), to identify men who consistently produced elevated frequencies of aneuploid sperm and to determine whether men who were identified as stable variants of sperm aneuploidy also exhibited higher frequencies of aneuploidy in their peripheral blood lymphocytes. Seven semen specimens were provided by each of 15 men over a 2-year period and were evaluated by the X-Y-8 multicolor sperm FISH method (i.e., approximately 1,050,000 sperm were analyzed from 105 specimens). Three men were identified as stable aneuploidy variants producing significantly higher frequencies of XY, disomy X, disomy Y, disomy 8, and/or diploid sperm over time. In addition, one man and three men were identified as sperm-morphology and sperm-motility variants, respectively. Strong correlations were found between the frequencies of sperm with autosomal and sex-chromosome aneuploidies and between the two types of meiosis II diploidy; but not between sperm aneuploidy and semen quality. A significant association was found between the frequencies of sex-chromosome aneuploidies in sperm and lymphocytes in a subset of 10 men (r2=0.67, P=.004), especially between XY sperm and sex-chromosome aneuploidy in lymphocytes (r2=0.70, P=.003). These findings suggest that certain apparently healthy men can produce significantly higher frequencies of both aneuploid sperm and lymphocytes. Serious long-term somatic and reproductive health consequences may include increased risks of aneuploidy-related somatic diseases and of having children with paternally transmitted aneuploidies, such as Klinefelter, Turner, triple-X, and XYY syndromes.  相似文献   

11.
In order to evaluate a possible paternal age effect, testicular sperm cells from three men aged 81, 82, and 83 yr were analyzed by two-color- and three-color-fluorescence in situ hybridization for disomy rates of chromosomes 1, 17, 18, X, and Y as well as for diploidy frequencies. A minimum of 1500 sperm cells per donor and probe was evaluated due to the low number of spermatozoa in the preparations. Diploidy and disomy frequencies were in the same range as found in men aged <30 yr, a slight increase only being noticed for XY nuclei.  相似文献   

12.
Infertile men undergoing intracytoplasmic sperm injection have an increased frequency of chromosome abnormalities in their sperm. Men with low sperm concentration (oligozoospermia) have an increased risk of sperm chromosome abnormalities. This study was initiated to determine whether men with severe oligozoospermia (<10(6) sperm/ml) have a higher frequency of chromosome abnormalities in their sperm compared with men with moderate (1-9 x 10(6) sperm/ml) or mild (10-19 x 10(6) sperm/ml) oligozoospermia. Multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis was performed using DNA probes specific for chromosomes 13, 21, X, and Y (with chromosome 1 as an autosomal control for the sex chromosomes). Aneuploidy and disomy frequencies were assessed from a total of 603,011 sperm from 30 men: 10 in each of the categories. The mean frequencies of disomy for the patients with mild, moderate, and severe oligozoospermia were 0.17%, 0.24%, and 0.30%, respectively, for chromosome 13 and 0.22%, 0.44%, and 0.58%, respectively, for chromosome 21. For the sex chromosomes, the mean frequencies of disomy for mild, moderate, and severe oligozoospermia were 0.25%, 1.04%, and 0.68%, respectively, for XY, 0.047%, 0.08%, and 0.10%, respectively, for XX, and 0.04%, 0.06%, and 0.09%, respectively, for YY. The frequencies for diploidy also increased from 0.4% for mild to 1.20% for moderate to 1.24% for severe oligozoospermia. There was a significant inverse correlation between the frequency of sperm chromosome abnormalities and the sperm concentration for XY, XX, and YY disomy and diploidy. These results demonstrate that men with severe oligozoospermia have an elevated risk for chromosome abnormalities in their sperm, particularly sex chromosome abnormalities.  相似文献   

13.
We reviewed the frequency and distribution of disomy in spermatozoa obtained by multicolor-FISH analysis on decondensed sperm nuclei in (a) healthy men, (b) fathers of aneuploid offspring of paternal origin and (c) individuals with Klinefelter syndrome and XYY males. In series of healthy men, disomy per autosome is approximately 0.1% but may range from 0.03 (chromosome 8) to 0.47 (chromosome 22). The great majority of authors find that chromosome 21 (0.18%) and the sex chromosomes (0.27%) have significantly elevated frequencies of disomy although these findings are not universal. The total disomy in FISH studies is 2.26% and the estimated aneuploidy (2× disomy) is 4.5%, more than double that seen in sperm karyotypes (1.8%). Increased disomy levels of low orders of magnitude have been reported in spermatozoa of some normal men (stable variants) and in men who have fathered children with Down, Turner and Klinefelter syndromes. These findings suggest that men with a moderately elevated aneuploidy rate may be at a higher risk of fathering paternally derived aneuploid pregnancies. Among lifestyle factors, smoking, alcohol and caffeine have been studied extensively but the compounding effects of the 3 are difficult to separate because they are common lifestyle behaviors. Increases in sex chromosome abnormalities, some autosomal disomies, and in the number of diploid spermatozoa are general features in 47,XXY and 47,XYY males. Aneuploidy of the sex chromosomes is more frequent than aneuploidy of any of the autosomes not only in normal control individuals, but also in patients with sex chromosome abnormalities and fathers of paternally derived Klinefelter, Turner and Down syndromes.  相似文献   

14.
Both structural and numerical chromosome aberrations in sperm represent important categories of paternally transmitted genetic damage. Therefore, a new multiprobe fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) method, using DNA probes for three targets (centromere and telomere of chromosome 1, centromere of chromosome 8), was developed to detect human sperm carrying three types of chromosomal defects: (1) terminal duplications or deletions in chromosome 1p, (2) aneuploidy involving chromosomes 1 or 8, and (3) diploidy. Baseline frequencies were determined for three healthy donors who had been previously evaluated for sperm cytogenetics by the human-sperm/hamster-oocyte cytogenetic technique (hamster technique). Among ∼120 000 sperm analyzed by the new FISH method, the average baseline frequencies of sperm carrying telomeric duplications and deletions of 1p were 3.2 ± 1.9 and 2.9 ± 3.6 per 104, respectively. Diploid sperm was found in an average frequency of 6.6 ± 4.0 per 104. Average frequencies of disomic sperm for chromosomes 1 or 8 were 1.7 ± 2.2 and 1.9 ± 2.3 per 104, respectively. Inter-individual differences were observed for deletions of 1p but not for the other sperm phenotypes. A good correlation was obtained between the frequencies of sperm with structural chromosome aberrations detected with the new assay and the frequency of sperm carrying premeiotic or meiotic cytogenetic damage detected with the hamster technique. The observed levels of numerical aberrations with the new FISH assay were within range of the baseline frequencies reported by the hamster technique. The newly developed FISH assay has promising applications in genetic, clinical, physiological and toxicological studies. Received: 26 February 1996 / Revised: 6 May 1996  相似文献   

15.
This study reviews the frequency and distribution of numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities in spermatozoa from normal men obtained by the human-hamster system and by multicolor-FISH analysis on decondensed sperm nuclei. Results from large sperm karyotyping series analyzed by chromosome banding techniques and results from multicolor FISH in sperm nuclei (of at least 10(4) spermatozoa per donor and per probe) were reviewed in order to establish baseline values of the sperm chromosome abnormalities in normal men. In karyotyping studies, the mean disomy frequency in human sperm is 0.03% for each of the autosomes, and 0.11% for the sex chromosomes, lower than those reported in sperm nuclei by FISH studies using a similar methodology (0.09% and 0.26%, respectively). Both types of studies coincide in that chromosome 21 and sex chromosomes have a greater tendency to suffer segregation errors than the rest of the autosomes. The mean incidence of diploidy, only available from multicolor FISH in sperm nuclei, is 0.19%. Inter-donor differences observed for disomy and diploidy frequencies among FISH studies of decondensed sperm nuclei using a similar methodology could reflect real differences among normal men, but they could also reflect the subjective application of the scoring criteria among laboratories. The mean frequency of structural aberrations in sperm karyotypes is 6.6%, including all chromosome types of abnormalities. Chromosome 9 shows a high susceptibility to be broken and 50% of the breakpoints are located in 9q, between the centromere and the 9qh+ region. Structural chromosome aberrations for chromosomes 1 and 9 have also been analyzed in human sperm nuclei by multicolor FISH. Unfortunately, this assay does not allow to determine the specific type of structural aberrations observed in sperm nuclei. An association between advancing donor age and increased frequency of numerical and structural chromosome abnormalities has been reported in spermatozoa of normal men.  相似文献   

16.
De novo aberrations in chromosome structure represent important categories of paternally transmitted genetic damage. Unlike numerical abnormalities, the majority of de novo structural aberrations among human offspring are of paternal origin. We report the development of a three-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) assay (CT8) to detect mouse sperm carrying structural and numerical chromosomal abnormalities. The CT8 assay uses DNA probes for the centromeric and telomeric regions of chromosome 2, and a probe for the subcentromeric region of chromosome 8. The CT8 assay was used to measure the frequencies of sperm carrying certain structural aberrations involving chromosome 2 (del2ter, dup2ter, del2cen, dup2cen), disomy 2, disomy 8, and sperm diploidy. Analysis of approximately 80,000 sperm from eight B6C3F1 mice revealed an average baseline frequency of 2.5 per 10,000 sperm carrying partial duplications and deletions of chromosome 2. Extrapolated to the entire haploid genome, approximately 0.4% of mouse sperm are estimated to carry structural chromosomal aberrations, which is more than fivefold lower than the spontaneous frequencies of sperm with chromosome structural aberrations in man. We validated the CT8 assay by comparing the frequencies of abnormal segregants in sperm of T(2;14) translocation carriers detected by this assay against those detected by chromosome painting cytogenetic analysis of meiosis II spermatocytes. The CT8 sperm FISH assay is a promising method for detecting structural chromosome aberrations in mouse sperm with widespread applications in genetics, physiology, and genetic toxicology.  相似文献   

17.
Cigarette smoking and aneuploidy in human sperm   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Cigarette smoke contains chemicals which are capable of inducing aneuploidy in experimental systems. These chemicals have been shown to reach the male reproductive system, increasing oxidative DNA damage in human sperm and lowering semen quality. We have examined the association between smoking and aneuploid sperm by studying 31 Chinese men with similar demographic characteristics and lifestyle factors except for cigarette smoking. None of the men drank alcohol. These men were divided into three groups: nonsmokers (10 men), light smokers (< 20 cigarettes/day, 11 men), and heavy smokers (> or = 20 cigarettes/day, 10 men). There were no significant differences in semen parameters or in age across groups. Two multi-color fluorescence in situ hybridizations (FISH) were performed: two-color FISH for chromosomes 13 and 21, and three-color FISH for the sex chromosomes using chromosome 1 as an internal autosomal control for diploidy and lack of hybridization. The mean hybridization efficiency was 99.78%. The frequency of disomy 13 was significantly higher in light and heavy smokers than in non-smokers, while no significant differences in the frequency of disomy 21, X or Y were observed across groups. Significant inter-donor heterogeneity in every category of disomic sperm examined was found in both light and heavy smokers, while in nonsmokers only XY disomy showed significant inter-donor differences. Thus, we conclude that cigarette smoking may increase the risk of aneuploidy only for certain chromosomes and that men may have different susceptibilities to aneuploidy in germ cells induced by cigarette smoking. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 59: 417-421, 2001.  相似文献   

18.
The purpose of this study was the evaluation of aneuploidy frequencies in the spermatozoa of two fathers (DP-4 and DP-5) who had children with Down syndrome (DS) of paternal origin and in whom a previous sperm analysis by fluoresence in situ hybridisation (FISH) had suggested a generalised tendency to meiotic non-disjunction. Sperm samples were simultaneously hybridised with FISH probes for chromosomes 4, 13 and 22. Disomy frequencies for each of the chromosomes and diploidy frequencies were compared with data obtained from nine control donors. Both DS fathers had a statistically significant increase in the frequency of disomy for chromosomes 13 and 22. DP-5 also had an increased frequency of diploid spermatozoa. Our data suggest that the two DS fathers have a generalised susceptibility to meiotic non-disjunction and that acrocentric chromosomes seem to be more sensitive to such disturbance in the meiotic process.  相似文献   

19.
Aneuploidy estimates for chromosomes 1, 12, X, and Y were obtained in human sperm from five donors using multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis. Disomy frequencies were obtained by scoring a minimum of 10,000 sperm for each chromosome probe per donor. This analysis was replicated for two scoring criteria: one used one half of a signal domain as the minimum distance between two signals to be counted as two and thus disomic; the other set one signal domain as the minimum distance between two signals. A total of 120,870 sperm were assessed using one half of a domain as the criterion, and 113,478 were scored using one domain as the criterion. The percentage of disomy for chromosomes 1, 12, X, Y, and XY was 0.18, 0.16, 0.15, 0.19, and 0.25, respectively, using the one-half-domain criterion, and 0.08, 0.17, 0.07, 0.12, and 0.16, respectively, using the one-domain criterion. The percentage of disomy decreased significantly with use of one domain as the minimum distance for signal separation for all chromosomes except for chromosome number 12. These lower disomy frequencies correlated well with frequencies derived from human sperm karyotypes analyzed in our laboratory. This suggests that the fluorescent signals for chromosomes 1, X, and Y split into more than one domain in decondensed interphase sperm, and that the use of the one-half-domain criterion would lead to an overestimate of aneuploidy frequencies. The factors known to affect aneuploidy estimates derived from FISH studies are discussed, and recommendations for stringent scoring criteria are proposed. © 1995 wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Research over the past few years has clearly demonstrated that infertile men have an increased frequency of chromosome abnormalities in their sperm. These studies have been further corroborated by an increased frequency of chromosome abnormalities in newborns and fetuses from pregnancies established by intracytoplasmic sperm injection. Most studies have considered men with any type of infertility. However, it is possible that some types of infertility have an increased risk of sperm chromosome abnormalities, whereas others do not. We studied 10 men with a specific type of infertility, asthenozoospermia (poor motility), by multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis to determine whether they had an increased frequency of disomy for chromosomes 13, 21, XX, YY, and XY, as well as diploidy. The patients ranged in age from 28 to 42 yr (mean 34.1 yr); they were compared with 18 normal control donors whose ages ranged from 23 to 58 yr (mean 35.6 yr). A total of 201 416 sperm were analyzed in the men with asthenozoospermia, with a minimum of 10 000 sperm analyzed per chromosome probe per donor. There was a significant increase in the frequency of disomy in men with asthenozoospermia compared with controls for chromosomes 13 and XX. Thus, this study indicates that infertile men with poorly motile sperm but normal concentration have a significantly increased frequency of sperm chromosome abnormalities.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号