Disruption of maternal DNA repair increases sperm-derived chromosomal aberrations

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Abstract

Male and female germ cells can transmit genetic defects that lead to pregnancy loss, infant mortality, birth defects, and genetic diseases in offspring; however, the parental origins of transmitted defects are not random, with de novo mutations and chromosomal structural aberrations transmitted predominantly by sperm. We tested the hypotheses that paternal mutagenic exposure during late spermatogenesis can induce damage that persists in the fertilizing sperm and that the risk of embryos with paternally transmitted chromosomal aberrations depends on the efficiency of maternal DNA repair during the first cycle after fertilization. We show that female mice with defective DNA double-strand break repair had significantly increased frequencies of zygotes with sperm-derived chromosomal aberrations after matings with wild-type males irradiated 7 days earlier with 4 Gy of ionizing radiation. These findings demonstrate that mutagenic exposures during late spermatogenesis can induce damage that persists for at least 7 days in the fertilizing sperm and that maternal genotype plays a major role in determining the risks for pregnancy loss and frequencies of offspring with chromosomal defects of paternal origin. © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.

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APA

Marchetti, F., Essers, J., Kanaar, R., & Wyrobek, A. J. (2007). Disruption of maternal DNA repair increases sperm-derived chromosomal aberrations. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 104(45), 17725–17729. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0705257104

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