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Sertoli Cell Function in Infertile Patients with and without Microdeletions of the Azoospermia Factors on the Y Chromosome Long Arm1
Deletions of the azoospermia factors on the Y chromosome long arm are an important cause of male infertility, and they may involve germ cell-specific genes or ubiquitously expressed genes. To date, no clinical or hormonal parameters have yet been found to distinguish patients with and without Yq mic...
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Published in: | The journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism 2001-06, Vol.86 (6), p.2414-2419 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Deletions of the azoospermia factors on the Y
chromosome long arm are an important cause of male infertility, and
they may involve germ cell-specific genes or ubiquitously expressed
genes. To date, no clinical or hormonal parameters have yet been found
to distinguish patients with and without Yq microdeletions. In
particular, Sertoli cell function, as evaluated by inhibin B, has not
yet been described. Our hypothesis was that microdeletions involving
genes specifically expressed in germ cells should not alter Sertoli
cell function. To do this, we have evaluated the testicular hormonal
function in infertile patients affected by severe testiculopathies with
and without Yq microdeletions, with particular emphasis on Sertoli cell
function. We studied 102 well-characterized infertile patients; 27 had
Yq microdeletions, and 75 were classified as idiopathic infertiles.
Patients with Yq microdeletions had lower FSH and higher inhibin B
plasma concentrations with respect to patients without microdeletions,
suggesting that Sertoli cell function in Yq-deleted men is only
partially altered. Furthermore, patients with deletions involving germ
cell-specific genes had higher concentrations of inhibin B with respect
to patients with deletions of ubiquitously expressed genes. These
results suggested that a specific alteration of germ cells only
partially influences Sertoli cell function. Hormonal status of patients
without deletions suggested that in such cases the cause that has
determined the spermatogenic defect may have damaged both Sertoli and
germ cells. Inhibin B production in patients with Yq deletions was
about 70% higher than the nondeleted patients, and the functional
relationship between FSH and inhibin B was normally preserved. This
study elucidated the multifactorial mechanisms underlying spermatogenic
defects, where Sertoli cells may be normally functioning or damaged
depending on the primary cause that has determined the testicular
damage. |
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ISSN: | 0021-972X 1945-7197 |
DOI: | 10.1210/jcem.86.6.7530 |