4.6 Article

The human Y chromosome genes BPY2, CDY1 and DAZ are not essential for sustained fertility

Journal

MOLECULAR HUMAN REPRODUCTION
Volume 6, Issue 9, Pages 789-793

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molehr/6.9.789

Keywords

azoospermia; AZfc; infertility; spermatogenesis; Y chromosome

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Deletions of the AZFc interval of the human Y chromosome are found in >5% of mate patients with idiopathic infertility and are associated with a severely reduced sperm count. The most common deletion type is large (>1 Mb) and removes members of the Y-borne testis-specific gene families of BPY2, CDY1, DAZ, PRY, RBMY2 and TTY2, which are candidate AZF genes. Four exceptional individuals who have transmitted a large AZFc deletion naturally to their infertile sons have, however, been described. In three cases, transmission was to an only son, but in the fourth case a Y chromosome, shown to be deleted for all copies of DAZ, was transmitted from a father to his four infertile sons. Here we present a second family of this latter type and demonstrate that an AZFc-deleted Y chromosome lacking not only DAZ, but also BPY2 and CDY1, has been transmitted from a father to his three infertile sons. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and Southern blot analyses revealed no difference in the size of the AZFc deletion in the father and his sons. We propose that the father carries rare alleles of autosomal or X-linked loci which suppress the infertility that is frequently associated with the absence of AZFc.

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