Mitochondria-related male infertility

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Abstract

Approximately 15% of human couples are affected by infertility, and about half of these cases of infertility can be attributed to men, through low sperm motility (asthenozoospermia) or/and numbers (oligospermia). Because mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) mutations are identified in patients with fertility problems, there is a possibility that mitochondrial respiration defects contribute to male infertility. To address this possibility, we used a transmitochondrial mouse model (mito-mice) carrying wild-type mtDNA and mutant mtDNA with a pathogenic 4,696-bp deletion (AmtDNA). Here we show that mitochondrial respiration defects caused by the accumulation of AmtDNA induced oligospermia and asthenozoospermia in the mito-mice. Most sperm from the infertile mito-mice had abnormalities in the middle piece and nucleus. Testes of the infertile mito-mice showed meiotic arrest at the zygotene stage as well as enhanced apoptosis. Thus, our in vivo study using mito-mice directly demonstrates that normal mitochondrial respiration is required for mammalian spermatogenesis, and its defects resulting from accumulated mutant mtDNAs cause male infertility. © 2006 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.

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Nakada, K., Sato, A., Yoshida, K., Morita, T., Tanaka, H., Inoue, S. I., … Hayashi, J. I. (2006). Mitochondria-related male infertility. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 103(41), 15148–15153. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0604641103

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