Author:
Turner Katerina A.,Fishman Emily L.,Asadullah Mariam,Ott Brooke,Dusza Patrick,Shah Tariq A.,Sindhwani Puneet,Nadiminty Nagalakshmi,Molinari Emanuela,Patrizio Pasquale,Saltzman Barbara S.,Avidor-Reiss Tomer
Abstract
A large proportion of infertility and miscarriage causes are unknown. One potential cause is a defective sperm centriole, a subcellular structure essential for sperm motility and embryonic development. Yet, the extent to which centriolar maladies contribute to male infertility is unknown due to the lack of a convenient way to assess centriole quality. We developed a robust, location-based, ratiometric assay to overcome this roadblock, the Fluorescence-based Ratiometric Assessment of Centrioles (FRAC). We performed a case series study with semen samples from 33 patients, separated using differential gradient centrifugation into higher-grade (pellet) and lower-grade (interface) sperm fractions. Using a reference population of higher-grade sperm from infertile men with morphologically standard sperm, we found that 79% of higher-grade sperm of infertile men with substandard sperm morphology have suboptimal centrioles (P = 0.0005). Moreover, tubulin labeling of the sperm distal centriole correlates negatively with age (P = 0.004, R = −0.66). These findings suggest that FRAC is a sensitive method and that patient age and sperm morphology are associated with centriole quality.
Funder
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology
Cited by
11 articles.
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