Volume 11, Issue 3 (May 2009) 11, 325–332; 10.1038/aja.2008.31
18, X, Y aneuploidies and transmission electron microscopy studies in spermatozoa from five carriers of different reciprocal translocations
Elena Moretti1, Nicola Antonio Pascarelli1, Valentina Giannerini1, Michela Geminiani1, Cecilia Anichini2 and Giulia Collodel1
1 Department of Biomedical Sciences, Applied Biology Section, University of Siena, Siena 53100, Italy 2 Department of Pediatrics, Obstetrics and Reproductive Medicine, University of Siena, Siena 53100, Italy
Correspondence: Dr Giulia Collodel, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Applied Biology Section, University of Siena, Policlinico S. Maria alle Scotte, Siena 53100, Italy. Fax: +39-0577-233527 E-mail: collodel@unisi.it
Received 6 March 2008; Revised 5 May 2008; Accepted 1 June 2008; Published online 6 April 2009
Abstract |
We analysed ejaculated spermatozoa from five infertile men with different balanced reciprocal translocations to contribute to the study of meiotic segregation of chromosomes 18, X and Y and also to evaluate sperm morphology by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis. Conventional lymphocyte karyotype analyses highlighted different reciprocal balanced translocations: t(12;13), t(4;9), t(X;8), t(8;10) and t(3;16). Semen analysis was performed by light and TEM. Fluorescence in situ hybridization was performed directly on sperm nuclei using centromeric probes for chromosomes 18, X and Y. The carriers of the balanced reciprocal translocations considered in the present study showed a very similar pattern of sperm pathologies: diffused presence of apoptosis and immaturity. All patients showed meiotic segregation derangements, highlighted by the presence of sperm diploidies and sex chromosome disomies particularly related to the failure of the first meiotic division. However, an increased incidence of chromosome 18 aneuploidy was detected in spermatozoa from t(X;8) and t(8;10) carriers. We have also reported values from sex chromosomes such as t(X;8), although the X chromosome was involved in translocation. Since patients with reciprocal translocations and spermatogenetic impairment are candidates for intracytoplasmic sperm injection cycles, the study of sperm parameters, and particularly of the level of aneuploidy rates, would provide better information for couples at risk and would contribute to the data in the literature for a better understanding of the effects of chromosomal rearrangement on the whole meiotic process and, in particular, on chromosomes not involved in translocation.
Keywords: electron microscopy, fluorescence in situ hybridization, altered karyotype, spermatozoa, reciprocal translocation
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