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Title: Sex chromosome aneuploidy rates in the somatic cells of infertile men. Author: Duzcan F, Aybek Z, Tepeli E, Caner V, Cetin GO, Aybek H, Bagci H. Journal: J Reprod Med; 2006 Jun; 51(6):489-92. PubMed ID: 16846089. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: A large number of studies have shown that the prevalence of somatic chromosome abnormalities detectable with karyotyping is higher in infertile men. However, a normal somatic karyotype does not exclude the chance of having low level mosaicism. STUDY DESIGN: Eleven men with severe oligozoospermia and 10 healthy, fertile men were included in this study. All the patients had severe oligozoospermia with sperm counts < or =3,000,000/ mL. All participants had normal physical findings and testicular volume. The probe for dual-color fluorescence in situ hybridization consisted of an alpha satellite sequence in the centromeric region of chromosome X (DXZ1) and satellite III DNA at the Yq12 region of chromosome Y (DYZ1). RESULTS: The sex chromosome aneuploidy rate was significantly higher in subjects than in controls (p<0.001). The median incidence of sex chromosome aneuploidy in the oligozoospermic group was 4.5% (range, 0.8-7.3%), while in the control group it was 0.7% (range, 0.2-1.2%)., CONCLUSION: The incidence of aneuploidy in somatic cells is significantly greater in oligozoospermic men than in normal controls. That may suggest that chromosome instability is a result of altered genetic control during mitotic cell division. Our results demonstrate that men with oligozoospermia have an elevated risk for sex chromosome abnormalities in their somatic cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]