4.4 Article

Assessment of MUSASHI 1 and MUSASHI 2 expression in spermatozoa and testicular tissue

Journal

ANDROLOGIA
Volume 53, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/and.14187

Keywords

chromatin; lipid peroxidation; MUSASHI; spermatogenesis; varicocele

Categories

Funding

  1. Isfahan Fertility and Infertility Center
  2. Royan Institute

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study assessed sperm MSI1 and MSI2, as well as sperm functional tests in infertile men with varicocele and fertile men. While varicocele was associated with lower sperm concentration and motility, and higher abnormal sperm morphology, lipid peroxidation, DNA fragmentation and protamine deficiency, the expression of MSI1 and MSI2 genes in sperm cells was not significantly affected. The findings suggest that varicocele does not impact the relative expression of these genes in spermatozoa, despite their important roles in spermatogenesis.
MUSASHI (MSI) family plays the main role in the spermatogenesis process. The purpose of this study was the assessment of sperm MSI1 and MSI2, and sperm functional tests in infertile men (n = 30) with varicocele and fertile men (n = 30). Furthermore, MSI1 and MSI2 proteins were assessed in testicular tissue of azoospermic men (n = 9) as well as epididymal spermatozoa and testis of mice. Expression of MSI1 and MSI2 was assessed at RNA and protein levels in human spermatozoa. Sperm concentration and motility were significantly lower, while abnormal sperm morphology, lipid peroxidation, DNA fragmentation and protamine deficiency were significantly higher in men with varicocele compared to fertile individuals. Any significant difference was not observed in the expression of MSI1 and MSI2 mRNA between the two groups. Unlike MSI1 protein that was not detectable in humans, the relative expression of MSI2 protein was similar in varicocele and fertile individuals. The expression level of both Msi1 and Msi2 proteins was also observable in mouse spermatozoa. No significant relationship was observed between sperm functional parameters with expression of these genes. The data of this study demonstrated that although MSI1 and MSI2 play important roles during spermatogenesis, their relative expression in spermatozoa was not affected by varicocele.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available