Author:
Young Samuel,Schiffer Christian,Wagner Alice,Patz Jannika,Potapenko Anton,Herrmann Leonie,Nordhoff Verena,Pock Tim,Krallmann Claudia,Stallmeyer Birgit,Röpke Albrecht,Kierzek Michelina,Biagioni Cristina,Wang Tao,Haalck Lars,Deuster Dirk,Hansen Jan N,Wachten Dagmar,Risse Benjamin,Behre Hermann M,Schlatt Stefan,Kliesch Sabine,Tüttelmann Frank,Brenker Christoph,Strünker Timo
Abstract
The infertility of many couples seems to rest on an enigmatic dysfunction of the men’s sperm, rendering early diagnosis and evidence-based treatment by medically assisted reproduction impossible. Using a novel laboratory test, we assessed the function of the flagellar Ca2+channel CatSper in sperm of almost 2,300 men undergoing a fertility workup. Thereby, we identified a group of men with mutations inCATSPERgenes affecting the function of the channel. Although standard semen and computer-assisted sperm analysis were unremarkable, the couples required intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) to conceive a child. We show that their seemingly unexplained infertility and need for ICSI is, in fact, due to the failure of CatSper-deficient human sperm to hyperactivate and penetrate the egg coat. In summary, our study reveals that defective CatSper function represents the most common cause of unexplained male-factor infertility known thus far and that CatSper-related infertility can readily be diagnosed, enabling evidence-based treatment.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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