A homozygous ARMC3 splicing variant causes asthenozoospermia and flagellar disorganization in a consanguineous family

Author:

Rahim Fazal1ORCID,Tao Liu1,Khan Khalid1,Ali Imtiaz1,Zeb Aurang1,Khan Ihsan1,Dil Sobia1,Abbas Tanveer1,Hussain Ansar1,Zubair Muhammad1,Zhang Huan1,Hui Ma1,Khan Muzammil Ahmad2,Shah Wasim1,Shi Qinghua1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Reproduction and Genetics, First Affiliated Hospital of USTC, Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at Microscale, The CAS Key Laboratory of Innate Immunity and Chronic Disease, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine, Biomedical Sciences and Health Laboratory of Anhui Province, Institute of Health and Medicine, Hefei Comprehensive National Science Center University of Science and Technology of China Hefei China

2. Gomal Centre of Biochemistry and Biotechnology Gomal University Dera Ismail Khan Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan

Abstract

AbstractMale infertility due to asthenozoospermia is quite frequent, but its etiology is poorly understood. We recruited two infertile brothers, born to first‐cousin parents from Pakistan, displaying idiopathic asthenozoospermia with mild stuttering disorder but no ciliary‐related symptoms. Whole‐exome sequencing identified a splicing variant (c.916+1G>A) in ARMC3, recessively co‐segregating with asthenozoospermia in the family. The ARMC3 protein is evolutionarily highly conserved and is mostly expressed in the brain and testicular tissue of human. The ARMC3 splicing mutation leads to the exclusion of exon 8, resulting in a predicted truncated protein (p.Glu245_Asp305delfs*16). Quantitative real‐time PCR revealed a significant decrease at mRNA level for ARMC3 and Western blot analysis did not detect ARMC3 protein in the patient's sperm. Individuals homozygous for the ARMC3 splicing variant displayed reduced sperm motility with frequent morphological abnormalities of sperm flagella. Transmission electron microscopy of the affected individual IV: 2 revealed vacuolation in sperm mitochondria at the midpiece and disrupted flagellar ultrastructure in the principal and end piece. Altogether, our results indicate that this novel homozygous ARMC3 splicing mutation destabilizes sperm flagella and leads to asthenozoospermia in our patients, providing a novel marker for genetic counseling and diagnosis of male infertility.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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