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Ovarian dysgenesis in individuals with chromosomal abnormalities   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2  
Summary To understand better the pathogenesis of ovarian dysgenesis in individuals with abnormalities such as 45,X Turner syndrome, trisomy 13, and trisomy 18, we have examined microscopically the ovaries of 36 infants with a number of chromosomal abnormalities confirmed by karyotype analysis. All infants with trisomy 13, trisomy 18, triploidy, and 45,X were found to have severe ovarian dysgenesis characterized by a virtual absence of primary oocytes. The ovaries of individuals with 21 trisomy and of those with partial deletion or duplication of an autosome demonstrated variable findings, which ranged from complete absence of oocytes to a mild diminution of oocyte numbers. The results of this study suggest that the attrition of germ cells in these infants is a result of faulty meiotic pairing and that ovarian dysgenesis is a more frequent finding in children with karyotypic abnormalities than has been realized previously.Presented, in part, at the 1989 David W. Smith Morphogenesis and Malformations Conference, Madrid, 1989, and at the 1990 Southern Society for Pediatric Research Meeting, New Orleans, 1990  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Infertile men having numerical or structural sperm defects may carry several genetic abnormalities (karyotype abnormalities, Y chromosome microdeletions, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene mutations, androgen receptor gene mutations, and abnormalities seen in sperm cells) leading to this situation. First we aimed to investigate the relationship between the numerical and constitutional (morphological) sperm anomalies and the genetic disorders that can be seen in infertile males. Our other aim was to compare two different kinds of kits that we use for the detection of Y chromosome microdeletions. Sixty-three infertile males [44 nonobstructive azoospermic, 8 severe oligozoospermic, and 11 oligoasthenoteratozoospermic] were investigated in terms of somatic chromosomal constitutions and microdeletions of the Y chromosome. Sperm aneuploidy levels were analyzed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) in sperm cells obtained from the semen of six OAT patients. Microdeletion and sex chromosome aneuploidy (47,XXY) rates in somatic cells were found to be approximately 3.2% and 4.7%, respectively. Sperm aneuploidy rates were determined as 9%, 22%, and 47% in three patients out of six. Two of these three patients also had high rates of head anomalies in semen samples. High correlation was found between sperm aneuploidy rates and sperm head anomalies. Since the introduction of the assisted reproductive techniques for the treatment of severe male infertility, genetic tests and genetic counseling became very important due to the transmission of genetic abnormalities to the next generation. Thus in a very near future, for a comprehensive male infertility panel, it will be essential to include additional genetic tests, such as CFTR gene mutations, sperm mitochondrial DNA mutations, and androgen receptor gene mutations, besides the conventional chromosomal analyses, Y chromosome microdeletion detection, and sperm-FISH analyses.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of cryopreservation on the frequency and type of chromosomal abnormalities in human sperm were investigated. Employing a technique that enables direct visualization of human sperm chromosomes following in vitro penetration of hamster oocytes, sperm samples from 10 normal men were examined before and after freezing in liquid nitrogen. A total of 1,960 sperm karyotypes were analyzed, 1,132 before freezing and 828 after freezing. There was no significant difference in the frequency of structural chromosomal anomalies (10.5% prefreeze vs. 8.5% postfreeze), but there was a significant decrease in the frequency of numerical abnormalities (5.2% prefreeze vs. 3.0% postfreeze). However, there was a large excess of hypohaploid complements compared with hyperhaploid complements, suggesting that the hypohaploid complements were caused by technical artefact. A conservative estimate of aneuploidy, derived by doubling the hyperhaploid frequencies, did not differ before (0.4%) and after (0.4%) freezing. There was no evidence for interdonor variability in response to sperm cryopreservation for total chromosomal abnormalities, structural abnormalities, and sex ratios. The sex ratios were also not affected by cryopreservation and did not differ significantly from the theoretical 50%. It is concluded that cryopreservation does not affect the frequencies of chromosomal abnormalities or alter the sex ratio in human sperm, provided that an adequate cryoprotective buffer and freezing system is employed.  相似文献   

6.
Karyotype analysis by chromosome banding is the standard method for identifying numerical and structural chromosomal aberrations in pre- and postnatal cytogenetics laboratories. However, the chromosomal origins of markers, subtle translocations, or complex chromosomal rearrangements are often difficult to identify with certainty. We have developed a novel karyotyping technique, termed spectral karyotyping (SKY), which is based on the simultaneous hybridization of 24 chromosome-specific painting probes labeled with different fluorochromes or fluorochrome combinations. The measurement of defined emission spectra by means of interferometer-based spectral imaging allows for the definitive discernment of all human chromosomes in different colors. Here, we report the comprehensive karyotype analysis of 16 samples from different cytogenetic laboratories by merging conventional cytogenetic methodology and spectral karyotyping. This approach could become a powerful tool for the cytogeneticists, because it results in a considerable improvement of karyotype analysis by identifying chromosomal aberrations not previously detected by G-banding alone. Advantages, limitations, and future directions of spectral karyotyping are discussed. Received: 4 August 1997 / Accepted: 8 September 1997  相似文献   

7.
It has been suggested that an assay for sperm morphology might prove useful as an initial screen in evaluating men at risk for an increased frequency of sperm chromosomal abnormalities. In this study, the technique for analysis of human sperm chromosomes after penetration of hamster eggs was employed to determine whether there is an association between the frequency of chromosomally and morphologically abnormal sperm. 30 healthy men of proven fertility were studied. The ages of the donors ranged from 22 to 55 years. The analysis was performed "blindly" so that the technician analysing the chromosome spreads had no knowledge of the age of the donors or of the individual frequencies of morphologically abnormal sperm. There was no significant relationship between the proportion of morphologically abnormal sperm and the proportion of chromosomally abnormal sperm when controlled for age. This was true for the total frequency of chromosomal abnormalities and also for numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities. These results suggest that an assay of morphology is not a good indication of chromosomal normality in human sperm.  相似文献   

8.
Among various causes responsible for infertility, it has been admitted for a long time that male infertility can be due to impaired spermatogenesis and/or balanced structural chromosomal abnormalities. Sperm DNA fragmentation is also considered as another cause of infertility. Most of the studies on male infertility have concerned either aneuploidy in the sperm of carriers of constitutional chromosomal abnormalities or sperm DNA fragmentation. This review is aimed at analyzing these 2 parameters in the same patients. Furthermore, we present work on the study of these 2 parameters in the same gametes of 4 carriers of a balanced chromosomal abnormality. Meiotic segregation was analyzed by fluorescent in situ hybridization and DNA fragmentation was detected by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling assay. It was shown that aneuploidy and DNA fragmentation were increased in the sperm of carriers of a balanced chromosomal abnormality. For all 4 carriers of a balanced structural abnormality, there was a 2-5 times higher proportion of spermatozoa with unbalanced chromosomal content and fragmented DNA than among those with normal/balanced content. Moreover, we found a non-random distribution with more gametes with DNA fragmentation when these arose from a particular segregation mode. The mechanism which would tend to explain our results is abortive apoptosis. In conclusion, both meiotic segregation and DNA fragmentation studies should be integrated in the genetic exploration of male carriers of a chromosomal structural abnormality.  相似文献   

9.
Curacron is an organophosphorus pesticide widely used in cotton fields. In order to assay its mutagenic potential in mammalian germ cells chromosomal aberrations in spermatogonial cells and sperm abnormalities were examined in mice after Curacron treatment. For studying chromosomal aberrations mice were treated both acutely (single treatment) and subacutely (for 5 consecutive days) with 3 dose levels of Curacron, 12, 36 and 72 mg/kg. Curacron was found to produce a significant increase in structural chromosomal aberrations after acute and subacute treatments. This increase was dose-dependent. A dose-dependent inhibition in mitotic activity in spermatogonia was also found. For studying sperm abnormalities mice were treated for 5 consecutive days with 20, 40 and 60 mg/kg. Morphological sperm abnormalities increased significantly after treatment with Curacron. The increase was dose-dependent. An inhibition of 40.2% in sperm count and of 74.5% in sperm motility occurred after treatment with 60 mg/kg Curacron. These results show that Curacron has a damaging effect on spermatogonial cells as well as on sperm morphology.  相似文献   

10.
Recently, intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) has been extremely successful for the treatment of male infertility. However, transmission of cytogenetic defects to offspring is a great concern. There are two types of cytogenetic problems in patients seeking ICSI; one is the transmission of genetic defects from patients with constitutional chromosomal abnormalities and the second is the generation of de novo defects in infertile men. Generally about 5.1% of infertile men have chromosomal abnormalities. Among such infertile men, men with severe spermatogenesis defects, including oligozoospermia and azoospermia, are subjects for ICSI. Therefore it is very important to obtain cytogenetic information in these infertile patients. Furthermore, oligozoospermic men with a normal somatic karyotype also have increased frequencies of sperm chromosome abnormalities. Oligozoospermia is usually associated with other sperm alterations, for example oligoasthenozoospermia, oligoteratozoospemia and oligoasthenoteratozoospermia. In this review, the relationship between sperm concentration and sperm aneuploidy frequencies has been analyzed. The inverse correlation between the frequency of sperm aneuploidy and concentration has been reported in extensive studies. Especially in severe oligozoospermia, a significantly higher frequency of sex chromosome aneuploidy has been observed and this has been corroborated in recent clinical outcome data of ICSI.  相似文献   

11.
Teratozoospermia is characterized by the presence of spermatozoa with abnormal morphology in sperm. This condition is frequently associated with infertility and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) is frequently used as the treatment of choice. However, the use of ICSI has created consequential debate concerning the genetic risk for the offspring. Fluorescence in situ hybridization technique (FISH), allowing the specific identification of human chromosomes in sperm nuclei, has been used to study chromosome abnormalities in sperm from men with teratozoospermia and a normal karyotype. In this review, we present studies that have tried to determine if men with a normal blood karyotype but suffering from teratozoospermia present a higher aneuploidy frequency. The literature is limited to three forms of teratozoospermia. The first group consists of "polymorphic teratozoospermia", where a majority of spermatozoa display more than one type of abnormality. In this case, only a slight increase in aneuploidy frequency is observed, which cannot be differentiated from the results observed in oligo-astheno-teratozoospermia (OAT). The second group, named "globozoospermia", is characterized by round spermatic heads, absence of acrosome and disorganization of mid-piece and tail. In this case, some studies have shown a significant, but moderate, increase in the aneuploidy frequency for acrocentrics and sex chromosomes. The aneuploidy frequency remains low, also ICSI can be proposed to these patients, but few successes occur. The third group consists of "enlarged head teratozoospermia", where almost all spermatozoa have an enlarged head, multiple tail and abnormal acrosome. In this case a very high level of missegregation is observed, leading to nearly 100% aneuploidy. In this particular group, ICSI must be refuted, and patients have to be redirected to other possibilities, like sperm donation.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of aneuploidy evaluation in spermatozoa from patients presenting spermatogenesis defects is to identify a relationship between meiotic errors and quantitative or qualitative alterations of spermatogenesis. During the past ten years, the use of fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) has permitted the determination of the frequency of numerical chromosome aberrations in different clinical situations. It has been established that infertile males with reduced sperm count and a normal constitutional karyotype have a significantly high risk of aneuploidy in their spermatozoa particularly regarding sex chromosomes. Concerning sperm motility, the data are more controversial. However, patients of severe asthenozoospermia induced by specific morphological deformities involving sperm flagella have a significantly high risk of producing aneuploid spermatozoa.  相似文献   

13.
One thousand human sperm and hamster egg haploid karyotypes were analyzed at the pronuclear stage after in vitro penetration. The frequency of abnormalities in human sperm was 8.5%, with 5.2% aneuploidy and 3.3% structural abnormalities. The hamster egg complements had an abnormality rate of 3.8%, with 3.3% aneuploidy and 0.5% structural abnormalities. In both human and hamster complements, chromosome abnormalities were observed in all chromosome groups, demonstrating that all chromosomes are susceptible to nondisjunction, not just acrocentric or small chromosomes. There is an intriguing difference between the frequency of hyperhaploid and hypohaploid complements in human sperm and hamster eggs. In the human complements, 2.4% were hyperhaploid and 2.7% hypohaploid. This is very close to the theoretical 1 to 1 ratio expected from nondisjunction. The hamster egg complements had more hypohaploid (2.2%) than hyperhaploid (0.9%) complements, despite identical treatment. Higher rates of hypohaploidy are generally ascribed to artificial loss of chromosomes, but may in fact reflect a predisposition of oocytes to anaphase lag during meiosis. The frequency of abnormalities (both numerical and structural) is higher in human complements than in hamster. This may reflect an innate propensity for meiotic chromosome abnormalities in humans or may result from greater exposure of humans to mutagenic agents.  相似文献   

14.
13 cancer patients were studied before radiotherapy (RT) and at regular intervals after RT to determine the effect of RT on chromosomal abnormalities in sperm. The men were 19-47 years old and received testicular radiation doses of 0.4-5.0 Gray. Human pronuclear sperm chromosomes were analysed after penetration of zona-pellucida-free hamster eggs. Unfortunately the hamster egg penetration rates were exceedingly low, both before and after RT and this limited the number of sperm chromosome complements which could be analysed. Before RT, the frequency of abnormal sperm chromosome complements was 0% (0/9). After RT, the majority of men were azoospermic for 24 months but complements could be analysed from 4 men. In the first 12 months the frequency of abnormalities was 13% (1/8) and at 24 months it was 13% (7/55). By 36 months after RT, most men had recovered sperm production and the frequency of abnormalities in 8 men was 21% (18/86), which is significantly higher than the rate in control donors (8.5%). For individual men the range was 6-67%, and there was a significant correlation between testicular radiation dose and the frequency of sperm chromosomal abnormalities. The frequencies of both numerical and structural abnormalities were significantly increased after RT. This is the first evidence that radiation may increase the frequency of chromosomal abnormalities in human gametes.  相似文献   

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Summary The chromosomal constitution of 1582 human sperm from 30 normal men of proven fertility was investigated after sperm penetration of hamster eggs. A minimum of 30 sperm chromosome complements were analysed per donor so that the distribution and variation in the frequency and type of sperm chromosomal abnormalities could be assessed. The mean frequency of sperm chromosomal abnormalities in individual men was 10.4% (±6.0%) with a range of 0–24.7%. For numerical abnormalities the mean was 4.7% (±2.9%) with a range of 0–10% and for structural abnormalities the mean was 6.2% (±6.0%) with a range of 0–23.1%. The 95% confidence intervals for the mean of an individual male were 0–10.5% for numerical abnormalities, 0–18.2% for structural abnormalities, and 0–22.4% for total abnormalities. There was a significant excess of hypohaploid complements compared with hyperhaploid complements. Since hypohaploid complements could be caused by technical artefact, a conservative estimate of aneuploidy was obtained by doubling the frequency of hyperhaploid sperm, yielding an estimate of 2.4% aneuploidy. The proportion of X-bearing (53%) and Y-bearing (47%) sperm did not differ significantly. These results were compared to the other two large studies of sperm chromosome complements from normal men.  相似文献   

17.
Chromosome breakage is a fairly widespread phenomenon in preimplantation embryos affecting at least 10% of day 3 cleavage stage embryos. It may be detected during preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD). For carriers of structural chromosomal abnormalities, PGD involves the removal and testing of single blastomeres from cleavage stage embryos, aiming towards an unaffected pregnancy. Twenty-two such couples were referred for PGD, and biopsied blastomeres on day 3 and untransferred embryos (day 5/6) were tested using fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) with appropriate probes. This study investigated whether chromosome breakage (a) was detected more frequently in cases where the breakpoint of the aberration was in the same chromosomal band as a fragile site and (b) was influenced by maternal age, sperm parameters, reproductive history, or the sex of the carrier parent. The frequency of breakage seemed to be independent of fragile sites, maternal age, reproductive history, and sex of the carrier parent. However, chromosome breakage was very significantly higher in embryos from male carriers with poor sperm parameters versus embryos from male carriers with normal sperm parameters. Consequently, embryos from certain couples were more prone to chromosome breakage, fragment loss, and hence chromosomally unbalanced embryos, independently of meiotic segregation.  相似文献   

18.
Human sperm karyotypes can be prepared after fusion of human sperm with Golden hamster oocytes. Most laboratories use one of two methods of sperm capacitation: incubation of freshly-ejaculated sperm in Biggers, Whitten, and Whittingham (BWW) medium for 5-7 h at 37 degrees C or sperm storage in (N-tris [hydroxymethyl]methyl-2-aminoethanesulfonic acid; 2-([2-hydroxy-1,1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl]amino)ethanesulfonic acid) (TES)-Tris yolk buffer (TYB) for 1-3 days at 4 degrees C. Since there have been conflicting reports as to whether there is a difference in the frequency of structural chromosomal abnormalities between BWW capacitation and storage in TYB for 2 days, we analyzed a larger number of karyotypes (8974) from 136 donors to determine if there was any difference in the frequency or type of chromosomal abnormalities in sperm treated by fresh BWW capacitation, storage in TYB for 1 day (TYB-1), or storage in TYB for 2 days (TYB-2). There was no difference in the frequency of numerical chromosomal abnormalities or sex ratio in any of the three treatment groups. However, there was a significantly increased frequency of structural chromosomal abnormalities after storage in TYB-1 and TYB-2. There was no difference in the frequency or type of structural chromosomal abnormalities after sperm storage in TYB-1 compared to TYB-2.  相似文献   

19.
It has been suggested that advanced paternal age (independent of maternal age) is associated with an increased incidence of trisomy. However, studies of human liveborn offspring and of data from prenatal diagnosis have yielded conflicting results. To investigate this possible paternal age effect, we have studied sperm chromosome complements from 30 normal men of proven fertility stratified by age, with five males in each of six age categories (20-24, 25-29, 30-34, 35-39, 40-44, and 45+ years). Sperm chromosome complements were visualized after penetration of golden-hamster oocytes. A minimum of 30 complements were analyzed for each male. The analysis was performed blindly, without knowledge of the donor's age. The mean frequency of sperm chromosomal abnormalities in the individual men was 10.4% with means of 4.7% for numerical abnormalities and 6.2% for structural abnormalities. There was no relationship between age and the frequency of numerical abnormalities in sperm. Since there was a significant difference between the frequency of hyperhaploid and hypohaploid complements, these two types of numerical abnormalities were analyzed separately. There was no correlation between the frequency of hypohaploid complements and age. There was a significant negative correlation between age and the frequency of hyperhaploid complements. For structural abnormalities, there was a highly significant positive correlation with age. Thus, our results do not support the hypothesis of an increased risk of trisomy with paternal age.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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