Homozygous mutation of AURKC yields large-headed polyploid spermatozoa and causes male infertility

Dieterich, Klaus; Rifo, Ricardo Soto; Faure, Anne Karen; Hennebicq, Sylviane; Ben Amar, Baha; Zahi, Mohamed; Perrin, Julia; Martinez, Delphine; Sele, Bernard; Jouk, Pierre-Simon; Ohlmann, Theophile; Rousseaux, Sophie; Lunardi, Joel; Ray, Pierre F.

Abstract

The World Health Organization conservatively estimates that 80 million people suffer from infertility worldwide. Male factors are believed to be responsible for 20 - 50% of all infertility cases, but microdeletions of the Y chromosome are the only genetic defects altering human spermatogenesis that have been reported repeatedly(1). We focused our work on infertile men with a normal somatic karyotype but typical spermatozoa mainly characterized by large heads, a variable number of tails and an increased chromosomal content ( OMIM 243060)(2-4). We performed a genome-wide microsatellite scan on ten infertile men presenting this characteristic phenotype. In all of these men, we identified a common region of homozygosity harboring the aurora kinase C gene (AURKC) with a single nucleotide deletion in the AURKC coding sequence. In addition, we show that this founder mutation results in premature termination of translation, yielding a truncated protein that lacks the kinase domain. We conclude that the absence of AURKC causes male infertility owing to the production of large-headed multiflagellar polyploid spermatozoa.

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Título según WOS: ID WOS:000245971300023 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: NATURE GENETICS
Volumen: 39
Número: 5
Editorial: NATURE PORTFOLIO
Fecha de publicación: 2007
Página de inicio: 661
Página final: 665
DOI:

10.1038/ng2027

Notas: ISI