Volume 26, Issue 1 (January 2024) 26, 71–76; 10.4103/aja202333
Detection and evaluation of different morphological forms of Mycoplasma hominis in human semen
Elizaveta Bragina 1 2, Tatyana Sorokina 1, Avtandil Chogovadze 3, Yulia Shevchenko 3, Vyacheslav Chernykh 1 4, Olga Barkhatova 5, Irina Rakovskaya 5
1Research Centre for Medical Genetics, Moscow 115522, Russia. 2A.N. Belozersky Institute of Physico-Chemical Biology Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow 119992, Russia. 3Reprolab Limited Liability Company, Moscow 119333, Russia. 4N.I. Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University, Moscow 117997, Russia. 5Federal Government Budgetary Institution "National Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology Named after Honorary Academician N.F. Gamaleya of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation", Moscow 123098, Russia.
Correspondence: Dr. T Sorokina (tm.s@bk.ru)
Originally published: September 15, 2023 Received: February 12, 2023 Accepted: June 18, 2023
Abstract |
Recently discovered microcolonial forms of Mycoplasma hominis (M. hominis) and their impact on human spermatogenesis are studied. The spermatozoa of 125 fertile men (sperm donors; from Reprobank [Reproductive Tissue Bank, Moscow, Russia]) and of 93 patients with fertility problems (from the Federal State Budgetary Institution "Research Centre for Medical Genetics [RCMG]", Moscow, Russia) were used. Classical colonies of M. hominis and microcolonies were detected by molecular biological methods, culture of bacteria, and transmission electron microscopy. The unique structure of microcolonial cells, in which the cytoplasmic cylinder is surrounded by concentric electron-dense and electron-light layers with a periodicity of 12-14 nm, and the ability of microcolonial cells to attach to spermatozoa are shown. In patients with lower sperm quality, microcolonies of M. hominis were detected 2.5 times more frequently than classical colonies. The detection of microcolonies in the ejaculate and the frequent isolation of microcolonies from sperm samples of patients with fertility problems suggest that microcolonial cells may be one cause of infertility.
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