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Haploinsufficiency at the Protein Kinase A RIα Gene Locus Leads to Fertility Defects in Male Mice and Men
Author(s) -
Kimberly A. Burton,
Deborah A. McDermott,
David Wilkes,
Melissa N. Poulsen,
Michael A. Nolan,
Marc Goldstein,
Craig T. Basson,
G. Stanley McKnight
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
molecular endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9917
pISSN - 0888-8809
DOI - 10.1210/me.2006-0060
Subject(s) - biology , haploinsufficiency , locus (genetics) , genetics , gene , fertility , protein kinase a , kinase , microbiology and biotechnology , phenotype , population , demography , sociology
Carney complex (CNC) is a familial multiple neoplasia syndrome characterized by spotty skin pigmentation, cardiac and cutaneous myxomas, and endocrine tumors. CNC is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait and is transmitted with greater frequency by women vs. men. Nearly two thirds of CNC patients are heterozygous for inactivating mutations in the gene encoding the protein kinase A (PKA) type Iα regulatory subunit (RIα), PRKAR1. We report here that male mice heterozygous for the Prkar1a gene have severely reduced fertility. Sperm from Prkar1a heterozygous mice are morphologically abnormal and reduced in number. Genetic rescue experiments reveal that this phenotype results from elevated PKA catalytic activity in germ cells as early as the pachytene stage of spermatogenesis. Consistent with this defect in the male mutant mice, sperm from CNC patients heterozygous for PRKAR1A mutations were also found to be morphologically aberrant and decreased in number. We conclude that unregulated PKA activity in male meiotic or postmeiotic germ cells leads to structural defects in mature sperm and results in reduced fertility in mice and humans, contributing to the strikingly reduced transmission of PRKAR1A inactivating mutations by male patients with CNC.

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