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Fertility genes required for sperm stem cells

Date:
September 27, 2016
Source:
University of California San Diego Health Sciences
Summary:
The underlying cause of male infertility is unknown for 30 percent of cases. In a pair of new studies, researchers have determined that the reproductive homeobox (RHOX) family of transcription factors -- regulatory proteins that activate some genes and inactivate others -- drive the development of stem cells in the testes in mice. The investigators also linked RHOX gene mutations to male infertility in humans.
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The underlying cause of male infertility is unknown for 30 percent of cases. In a pair of new studies, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine determined that the reproductive homeobox (RHOX) family of transcription factors -- regulatory proteins that activate some genes and inactivate others -- drive the development of stem cells in the testes in mice. The investigators also linked RHOX gene mutations to male infertility in humans. The mouse study is published September 27 by Cell Reports and the human study was published September 15 by Human Molecular Genetics.

"Infertility in general, and especially male fertility, gets little attention considering how common of a problem it is -- about 15 percent of couples are affected, and nearly half of these cases are due to male infertility," said Miles Wilkinson, PhD, professor of reproductive medicine at UC San Diego School of Medicine and senior author of the Cell Reports study. "That means around 7 percent of all males of reproductive age -- nearly 4 million men in the U.S. -- have fertility problems." Wilkinson is also a co-author of the Human Molecular Genetics study, which was led by Jörg Gromoll, PhD, at the University of Münster in Germany.

Sperm are made from cells that undergo many stages. Transcription factors have been identified that direct most of these cell stages, from the dividing cells in the embryo to the cells that rearrange and partition the chromosomes to individual "pre-sperm" in the testes. However, before this latest research, Wilkinson said no transcription factors were known to direct one of the most critical stages -- the formation of the stem cells in the testes, known as spermatogonial stem cells.

In the Cell Reports study, Wilkinson and team removed the entire cluster of 33 Rhox genes in mice. They were surprised to find that the most notable defect in these mice was a deficiency in spermatogonial stem cells. Hye-Won Song, PhD, assistant project scientist in Wilkinson's lab and first author of the Cell Reports study, removed just one of the Rhox genes -- Rhox10 -- and found essentially the same defect as deleting the full set.

Wilkinson, Song and team discovered there was nothing wrong with the spermatogonial stem cells in mice lacking Rhox10, only that there were so few. They found that this occurred because most of the earlier stage cells -- pro-spermatogonia -- did not specialize into spermatogonial stem cells. As a result, the testes of Rhox10-deficient mice did not enlarge and their sperm counts failed to increase as they aged.

The researchers concluded that Rhox10 is the most critical gene in the Rhox cluster, and that it plays a role in spermatogonial stem cell formation.

The Rhox genes are on the X chromosome. It makes sense that male infertility would be caused by mutated genes on the X chromosome, Wilkinson said, because men only have one copy -- if something goes wrong with an X-linked gene, they don't have a backup, like women do.

There are several potential clinical implications of these results, the researchers said. For example, Rhox genes may have roles in testicular tumors that arise from germ cells that failed to convert into spermatogonial stem cells and thus are "frozen" at the pro-spermatogonia stage. Rhox genes may also be useful for regenerative medicine approaches to restoring fertility through therapy with spermatogonial stem cells.

In the second study, published by Human Molecular Genetics, Gromoll and colleagues sequenced RHOX genes in 250 men with severely low sperm count. They found two mutations in one of these genes (RHOXF1) and four mutations in the other two (RHOXF2 and RHOXF2B, which are almost identical). Only one mutation was also found in a control group of men with normal sperm concentrations.

In laboratory experiments, the researchers found that one of the low sperm count-associated mutations significantly impaired transcription factor RHOXF2/2B's ability to regulate its target genes. Molecular modeling suggested that this mutation altered its 3-D structure.

"Spermatogonial stem cells allow men -- even in their 70s -- to generate sperm and father children," said Song, who also co-authored the Human Molecular Genetics study. "Our finding that Rhox10 is critical for spermatogonial stem cells, coupled with the finding that human RHOX genes are mutated in infertile men, suggests that mutations in these genes cause human male infertility."

This conclusion is further underscored by the previous finding that men with abnormal sperm characteristics tend to have RHOX genes excessively marked with chemical tags known as methyl groups. Wilkinson, Song and team are now working to better understand precisely how variations in RHOX transcription factors lead to human infertility.


Story Source:

Materials provided by University of California San Diego Health Sciences. Original written by Heather Buschman, PhD. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal References:

  1. Miles F. Wilkinson et al. The Homeobox Transcription Factor RHOX10 Drives Mouse Spermatogonial Stem Cell Establishment. Cell Reports, September 2016 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.08.090
  2. Jennifer Borgmann, Frank Tüttelmann, Bernd Dworniczak, Albrecht Röpke, Hye-Won Song, Sabine Kliesch, Miles F. Wilkinson, Sandra Laurentino, Jörg Gromoll. The humanRHOXgene cluster: target genes and functional analysis of gene variants in infertile men. Human Molecular Genetics, 2016; ddw313 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddw313

Cite This Page:

University of California San Diego Health Sciences. "Fertility genes required for sperm stem cells." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 27 September 2016. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160927134057.htm>.
University of California San Diego Health Sciences. (2016, September 27). Fertility genes required for sperm stem cells. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 21, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160927134057.htm
University of California San Diego Health Sciences. "Fertility genes required for sperm stem cells." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160927134057.htm (accessed December 21, 2024).

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