Journal
ANDROLOGIA
Volume 53, Issue 3, Pages -Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/and.13989
Keywords
epididymis; epididymosomes; male infertility; small RNA; sperm maturation
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Male infertility affects around 30% of infertile couples, with sperm maturation in the epididymis playing a crucial role in fertility. The epididymal epithelium provides a suitable environment for sperm maturation through ion transport, vesicle secretion, and protein matrix formation. Altered gene expression in the epididymis can lead to decreased sperm motility, morphological abnormalities, and subfertility, highlighting the importance of genetic factors in male infertility.
Male infertility affects approximately 30% of infertile couples. As spermatozoa mature in the epididymal lumen, their potential for mobility increases, and their protein, lipid and small RNA (sRNA) content changes, whereas capacitation and fertilisation take place in the female reproductive tract. Both of the latter processes are affected by maturation, because impaired maturation causes premature capacitation and fertilization. The epididymis produces a suitable environment for sperm maturation via ion transport, vesicle secretion and protein matrix formation. The microenvironment for sperm maturation varies in three broad segments: the caput, the corpus and the cauda epididymis. Epididymosomes transfer proteins, lipids and sRNAs from the epididymal epithelium to spermatozoa and genetic alterations of epididymal genes can lead to decreased sperm motility, morphological abnormalities of spermatozoa and subfertility. Genetic factors are involved in all aetiological categories in male infertility. However, studies conducted on the genes involved in epididymal functions are limited. The sRNA content of spermatozoa changes during epididymal migration, and these sRNAs play a role in embryo development and epigenetic inheritance. This review aims to clarify the role of the epididymal epithelium in the maturation of spermatozoa in light of the current molecular genomic knowledge.
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