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A de novo paradigm for male infertility

Authors :
Oud, MS
Smits, RM
Smith, HE
Mastrorosa, FK
Holt, GS
Houston, BJ
de Vries, PF
Alobaidi, BKS
Batty, LE
Ismail, H
Greenwood, J
Sheth, H
Mikulasova, A
Astuti, GDN
Gilissen, C
McEleny, K
Turner, H
Coxhead, J
Cockell, S
Braat, DDM
Fleischer, K
D'Hauwers, KWM
Schaafsma, E
Nagirnaja, L
Conrad, DF
Friedrich, C
Kliesch, S
Aston, KI
Riera-Escamilla, A
Krausz, C
Gonzaga-Jauregui, C
Santibanez-Koref, M
Elliott, DJ
Vissers, LELM
Tuettelmann, F
O'Bryan, MK
Ramos, L
Xavier, MJ
van der Heijden, GW
Veltman, JA
Oud, MS
Smits, RM
Smith, HE
Mastrorosa, FK
Holt, GS
Houston, BJ
de Vries, PF
Alobaidi, BKS
Batty, LE
Ismail, H
Greenwood, J
Sheth, H
Mikulasova, A
Astuti, GDN
Gilissen, C
McEleny, K
Turner, H
Coxhead, J
Cockell, S
Braat, DDM
Fleischer, K
D'Hauwers, KWM
Schaafsma, E
Nagirnaja, L
Conrad, DF
Friedrich, C
Kliesch, S
Aston, KI
Riera-Escamilla, A
Krausz, C
Gonzaga-Jauregui, C
Santibanez-Koref, M
Elliott, DJ
Vissers, LELM
Tuettelmann, F
O'Bryan, MK
Ramos, L
Xavier, MJ
van der Heijden, GW
Veltman, JA
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

De novo mutations are known to play a prominent role in sporadic disorders with reduced fitness. We hypothesize that de novo mutations play an important role in severe male infertility and explain a portion of the genetic causes of this understudied disorder. To test this hypothesis, we utilize trio-based exome sequencing in a cohort of 185 infertile males and their unaffected parents. Following a systematic analysis, 29 of 145 rare (MAF < 0.1%) protein-altering de novo mutations are classified as possibly causative of the male infertility phenotype. We observed a significant enrichment of loss-of-function de novo mutations in loss-of-function-intolerant genes (p-value = 1.00 × 10-5) in infertile men compared to controls. Additionally, we detected a significant increase in predicted pathogenic de novo missense mutations affecting missense-intolerant genes (p-value = 5.01 × 10-4) in contrast to predicted benign de novo mutations. One gene we identify, RBM5, is an essential regulator of male germ cell pre-mRNA splicing and has been previously implicated in male infertility in mice. In a follow-up study, 6 rare pathogenic missense mutations affecting this gene are observed in a cohort of 2,506 infertile patients, whilst we find no such mutations in a cohort of 5,784 fertile men (p-value = 0.03). Our results provide evidence for the role of de novo mutations in severe male infertility and point to new candidate genes affecting fertility.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315726775
Document Type :
Electronic Resource