[HTML][HTML] X-Linked TEX11 Mutations, Meiotic Arrest, and Azoospermia in Infertile Men

AN Yatsenko, AP Georgiadis, A Röpke… - … England Journal of …, 2015 - Mass Medical Soc
AN Yatsenko, AP Georgiadis, A Röpke, AJ Berman, T Jaffe, M Olszewska, B Westernströer…
New England Journal of Medicine, 2015Mass Medical Soc
Background The genetic basis of nonobstructive azoospermia is unknown in the majority of
infertile men. Methods We performed array comparative genomic hybridization testing in
blood samples obtained from 15 patients with azoospermia, and we performed mutation
screening by means of direct Sanger sequencing of the testis-expressed 11 gene (TEX11)
open reading frame in blood and semen samples obtained from 289 patients with
azoospermia and 384 controls. Results We identified a 99-kb hemizygous loss on …
Background
The genetic basis of nonobstructive azoospermia is unknown in the majority of infertile men.
Methods
We performed array comparative genomic hybridization testing in blood samples obtained from 15 patients with azoospermia, and we performed mutation screening by means of direct Sanger sequencing of the testis-expressed 11 gene (TEX11) open reading frame in blood and semen samples obtained from 289 patients with azoospermia and 384 controls.
Results
We identified a 99-kb hemizygous loss on chromosome Xq13.2 that involved three TEX11 exons. This loss, which was identical in 2 patients with azoospermia, predicts a deletion of 79 amino acids within the meiosis-specific sporulation domain SPO22. Our subsequent mutation screening showed five novel TEX11 mutations: three splicing mutations and two missense mutations. These mutations, which occurred in 7 of 289 men with azoospermia (2.4%), were absent in 384 controls with normal sperm concentrations (P=0.003). Notably, five of those TEX11 mutations were detected in 33 patients (15%) with azoospermia who received a diagnosis of azoospermia with meiotic arrest. Meiotic arrest in these patients resembled the phenotype of Tex11-deficient male mice. Immunohistochemical analysis showed specific cytoplasmic TEX11 expression in late spermatocytes, as well as in round and elongated spermatids, in normal human testes. In contrast, testes of patients who had azoospermia with TEX11 mutations had meiotic arrest and lacked TEX11 expression.
Conclusions
In our study, hemizygous TEX11 mutations were a common cause of meiotic arrest and azoospermia in infertile men. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.)
The New England Journal Of Medicine