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Rare mutations in the complement regulatory gene CSMD1 are associated with male and female infertility

Authors :
Abul Usmani
John P. Atkinson
Douglas T. Carrell
Moira K O'Bryan
Arthur Lee
Donald F. Conrad
Katinka A. Vigh-Conrad
Xiaobo Wu
Ronald E. Worthington
Ana C. Lima
Maarja Lepamets
Rex A. Hess
Kenneth I. Aston
Ni Huang
Jannette Rusch
Reedik Mägi
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-16 (2019), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2019.

Abstract

Infertility in men and women is a complex genetic trait with shared biological bases between the sexes. Here, we perform a series of rare variant analyses across 73,185 women and men to identify genes that contribute to primary gonadal dysfunction. We report CSMD1, a complement regulatory protein on chromosome 8p23, as a strong candidate locus in both sexes. We show that CSMD1 is enriched at the germ-cell/somatic-cell interface in both male and female gonads. Csmd1-knockout males show increased rates of infertility with significantly increased complement C3 protein deposition in the testes, accompanied by severe histological degeneration. Knockout females show significant reduction in ovarian quality and breeding success, as well as mammary branching impairment. Double knockout of Csmd1 and C3 causes non-additive reduction in breeding success, suggesting that CSMD1 and the complement pathway play an important role in the normal postnatal development of the gonads in both sexes.<br />Many molecular and physiological mechanisms in the regulation of fertility are shared between female and male mammals. Here, Lee et al. report an association of CNVs in CSMD1 with early idiopathic menopause in women and show that loss of Csmd1 leads to gonadal dysfunction in both male and female mice.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....315495513f785e5a98e98f18d5fc9140