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Biallelic SUN5 Mutations Cause Autosomal-Recessive Acephalic Spermatozoa Syndrome
Author(s) -
Fuxi Zhu,
Fengsong Wang,
Xiaoyu Yang,
Jingjing Zhang,
Huan Wu,
Zhou Zhang,
Zhiguo Zhang,
Xiaojin He,
Ping Zhou,
Zhaolian Wei,
Jozef Gécz,
Yunxia Cao
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the american journal of human genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.661
H-Index - 302
eISSN - 1537-6605
pISSN - 0002-9297
DOI - 10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.08.004
Subject(s) - compound heterozygosity , sanger sequencing , male infertility , biology , genetics , exome sequencing , infertility , population , allele , mutation , gene , medicine , pregnancy , environmental health
Acephalic spermatozoa syndrome is a rare and severe form of teratozoospermia characterized by a predominance of headless spermatozoa in the ejaculate. Family clustering and consanguinity suggest a genetic origin; however, causative mutations have yet to be identified. We performed whole-exome sequencing in two unrelated infertile men and subsequent variant filtering identified one homozygous (c.824C>T [p.Thr275Met]) and one compound heterozygous (c.1006C>T [p.Arg356Cys] and c.485T>A [p.Met162Lys]) SUN5 (also named TSARG4) variants. Sanger sequencing of SUN5 in 15 additional unrelated infertile men revealed four compound heterozygous (c.381delA [p.Val128Serfs ∗ 7] and c.824C>T [p.Thr275Met]; c.381delA [p.Val128Serfs ∗ 7] and c.781G>A [p.Val261Met]; c.216G>A [p.Trp72 ∗ ] and c.1043A>T [p.Asn348Ile]; c.425+1G>A/c.1043A>T [p.Asn348Ile]) and two homozygous (c.851C>G [p.Ser284 ∗ ]; c.350G>A [p.Gly114Arg]) variants in six individuals. These 10 SUN5 variants were found in 8 of 17 unrelated men, explaining the genetic defect in 47.06% of the affected individuals in our cohort. These variants were absent in 100 fertile population-matched control individuals. SUN5 variants lead to absent, significantly reduced, or truncated SUN5, and certain variants altered SUN5 distribution in the head-tail junction of the sperm. In summary, these results demonstrate that biallelic SUN5 mutations cause male infertility due to autosomal-recessive acephalic spermatozoa syndrome.

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