1.Innovative insights into extrachromosomal circular DNAs in gynecologic tumors and reproduction.
Ning WU ; Ling WEI ; Zhipeng ZHU ; Qiang LIU ; Kailong LI ; Fengbiao MAO ; Jie QIAO ; Xiaolu ZHAO
Protein & Cell 2024;15(1):6-20
Originating but free from chromosomal DNA, extrachromosomal circular DNAs (eccDNAs) are organized in circular form and have long been found in unicellular and multicellular eukaryotes. Their biogenesis and function are poorly understood as they are characterized by sequence homology with linear DNA, for which few detection methods are available. Recent advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies have revealed that eccDNAs play crucial roles in tumor formation, evolution, and drug resistance as well as aging, genomic diversity, and other biological processes, bringing it back to the research hotspot. Several mechanisms of eccDNA formation have been proposed, including the breakage-fusion-bridge (BFB) and translocation-deletion-amplification models. Gynecologic tumors and disorders of embryonic and fetal development are major threats to human reproductive health. The roles of eccDNAs in these pathological processes have been partially elucidated since the first discovery of eccDNA in pig sperm and the double minutes in ovarian cancer ascites. The present review summarized the research history, biogenesis, and currently available detection and analytical methods for eccDNAs and clarified their functions in gynecologic tumors and reproduction. We also proposed the application of eccDNAs as drug targets and liquid biopsy markers for prenatal diagnosis and the early detection, prognosis, and treatment of gynecologic tumors. This review lays theoretical foundations for future investigations into the complex regulatory networks of eccDNAs in vital physiological and pathological processes.
Male
;
Female
;
Animals
;
Humans
;
Swine
;
DNA, Circular/genetics*
;
Genital Neoplasms, Female
;
Semen
;
DNA
;
Reproduction
2.Platycladi Semen oil ameliorates Aβ_(25-35)-induced brain injury in mice based on network pharmacology and gut microbiota.
Meng-Nan ZENG ; Bing CAO ; Ao-Zi FENG ; Peng-Li GUO ; Meng LIU ; Yu-Han ZHANG ; Meng LI ; Xiao-Ke ZHENG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2023;48(15):4046-4059
The present study aimed to investigate the protective effect and underlying mechanism of Platycladi Semen oil(SP) on Aβ_(25-35)-induced brain injury in mice to provide a theoretical basis for the clinical treatment of Alzheimer's disease(AD). Male Kunming(KM) mice were randomly divided into a control group, a model group(brain injection of Aβ_(25-35), 200 μmol·L~(-1), 0.15 μL·g~(-1)), a positive drug group(donepezil, 10 mg·kg~(-1)), and low-and high-dose SP groups(0.5 and 1 mL·kg~(-1)). Learning and memory ability, neuronal damage, levels of Aβ_(1-42)/Aβ_(1-40), p-Tau, related indicators of apoptosis and oxidative stress, and immune cells, and protein and mRNA expression related to the sphingosine kinase 1(SPHK1)/sphingosine-1-phosphate(S1P)/sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 5(S1PR5) signaling pathway of mice in each group were determined. In addition, compounds in SP were analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry(GC-MS). The mechanism of SP against AD was investigated by network pharmacology, 16S rDNA gene sequencing for gut microbiota(GM), and molecular docking techniques. The results showed that SP could improve the learning and memory function of Aβ_(25-35)-induced mice, reduce hippocampal neuronal damage, decrease the levels of Aβ_(1-42)/Aβ_(1-40), p-Tau, and indicators related to apoptosis and oxidative stress in the brain, and maintain the homeostasis of immune cells and GM. Network pharmacology and sequencing analysis for GM showed that the therapeutic effect of SP on AD was associated with the sphingolipid signaling pathway. Meanwhile,(Z,Z,Z)-9,12,15-octadecatrienoic acid and(Z,Z)-9,12-octadecadienoic acid, the components with the highest content in SP, showed good binding activity to SPHK1 and S1PR5. Therefore, it is inferred that SP exerts anti-apoptosis and antioxidant effects by regulating GM and inhibiting SPHK1/S1P/S1PR5 pathway, thereby improving brain injury induced by Aβ_(25-35) in mice. Moreover,(Z,Z,Z)-9,12,15-octadecatrienoic acid and(Z,Z)-9,12-octadecadienoic acid may be the material basis for the anti-AD effect of SP.
Mice
;
Animals
;
Male
;
Semen/metabolism*
;
Gastrointestinal Microbiome
;
Network Pharmacology
;
Linoleic Acid
;
Molecular Docking Simulation
;
Alzheimer Disease/genetics*
;
Brain Injuries
3.Genetic analysis of an infant death due to a paternally derived FOXF1 somatic-gonadal mosaic variant.
Jing WANG ; Qingwen ZHU ; Aiming CUI ; Mengsi LIN ; Xian CAO
Chinese Journal of Medical Genetics 2023;40(9):1176-1180
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the genetic characteristics and cause of death for an infant with alveolar capillary dysplasia and pulmonary vein misalignment (ACD/MPV).
METHODS:
An infant with ACD/MPV diagnosed at the Affiliated Maternity and Child Health Care Hospital of Nantong University in September 2022 was selected as the study subject. Clinical data of the infant were collected. Whole exome sequencing (WES) was carried out to detect genetic variants in the skin tissue, and Sanger sequencing was performed for verifying the candidate variants in the parents. Droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) was used to determine the mosaicism ratio of the variant in different germ layer-derived samples from the father.
RESULTS:
The infant had died within 2 days after birth due to hypoxemia and respiratory distress. WES revealed that she has harbored a c.433C>T nonsense variant in exon 1 of the FOXF1 gene, which was unreported previously. Sanger sequencing has verified the variant in the infant, with her mother's locus being the wild-type and a minor variant peak noted in her father. ddPCR indicated that the mosaic ratio of the c.433C>T variant in the father's sperm was 27.18%, with the mosaic ratios of the variant in tissues originating from the three germ layers ranging from 11% to 28%.
CONCLUSION
The c.433C>T variant derived from the paternal germline and somatic mosaicism of the FOXF1 gene had probably predisposed to the neonatal death of this infant. ddPCR is an effective method for detecting mosaic variants.
Female
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Humans
;
Pregnancy
;
Child
;
Infant
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Male
;
Semen
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Infant Death
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Exons
;
Mosaicism
;
Forkhead Transcription Factors/genetics*
4.Factors influencing the sperm retrieval rate of microdissection testicular sperm extraction in patients with nonmosaic Klinefelter syndrome.
De-Feng LIU ; Han WU ; Zhe ZHANG ; Kai HONG ; Hao-Cheng LIN ; Jia-Ming MAO ; Hui-Yu XU ; Lian-Ming ZHAO ; Hui JIANG
Asian Journal of Andrology 2023;25(6):704-707
To investigate the factors affecting the sperm retrieval rate of microdissection testicular sperm extraction (micro-TESE) in patients with nonmosaic Klinefelter syndrome (KS), 64 patients with nonmosaic KS who underwent micro-TESE in the Center for Reproductive Medicine of Peking University Third Hospital (Beijing, China) between January 2016 and December 2017 were included in the study. Data on medical history, physical examination and laboratory examination results, and micro-TESE outcomes were collected. Patients were divided into two groups according to micro-TESE outcomes. The following factors were compared between the two groups by the Mann‒Whitney U test or Student's t-test based on the distribution (nonnormal or normal) of the factors: age, testicular size, follicle-stimulating hormone level, luteinizing hormone level, testosterone level, and anti-Müllerian hormone level. The overall success rate of sperm retrieval was 50.0%. Correlation analysis showed that testicular volume was positively correlated with testosterone level. Using a logistic regression model, age and anti-Müllerian hormone levels were found to be better predictors for the sperm retrieval rate than the other parameters.
Humans
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Male
;
Sperm Retrieval
;
Klinefelter Syndrome
;
Microdissection
;
Anti-Mullerian Hormone
;
Semen
;
Testis
;
Spermatozoa
;
Testosterone
;
Azoospermia
;
Retrospective Studies
5.Identification of a novel splice site mutation in the DNAAF4 gene of a Chinese patient with primary ciliary dyskinesia.
Yang XU ; Jing WANG ; Ji-Hai LIU ; Qing-Qiang GAO ; Bing WANG ; Zhi-Peng XU
Asian Journal of Andrology 2023;25(6):713-718
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare hereditary orphan condition that results in variable phenotypes, including infertility. About 50 gene variants are reported in the scientific literature to cause PCD, and among them, dynein axonemal assembly factor 4 ( DNAAF4 ) has been recently reported. DNAAF4 has been implicated in the preassembly of a multiunit dynein protein essential for the normal function of locomotory cilia as well as flagella. In the current study, a single patient belonging to a Chinese family was recruited, having been diagnosed with PCD and asthenoteratozoospermia. The affected individual was a 32-year-old male from a nonconsanguineous family. He also had abnormal spine structure and spinal cord bends at angles diagnosed with scoliosis. Medical reports, laboratory results, and imaging data were investigated. Whole-exome sequencing, Sanger sequencing, immunofluorescence analysis, hematoxylin-eosin staining, and in silico functional analysis, including protein modeling and docking studies, were used. The results identified DNAAF4 disease-related variants and confirmed their pathogenicity. Genetic analysis through whole-exome sequencing identified two pathogenic biallelic variants in the affected individual. The identified variants were a hemizygous splice site c.784-1G>A and heterozygous 20.1 Kb deletion at the DNAAF4 locus, resulting in a truncated and functionless DNAAF4 protein. Immunofluorescence analysis indicated that the inner dynein arm was not present in the sperm flagellum, and sperm morphological analysis revealed small sperm with twisted and curved flagella or lacking flagella. The current study found novel biallelic variants causing PCD and asthenoteratozoospermia, extending the range of DNAAF4 pathogenic variants in PCD and associated with the etiology of asthenoteratozoospermia. These findings will improve our understanding of the etiology of PCD.
Adult
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Humans
;
Male
;
Asthenozoospermia/genetics*
;
Dyneins/genetics*
;
East Asian People
;
Kartagener Syndrome/genetics*
;
Mutation
;
Proteins/genetics*
;
Semen/metabolism*
6.Dynein axonemal heavy chain 10 deficiency causes primary ciliary dyskinesia in humans and mice.
Rongchun WANG ; Danhui YANG ; Chaofeng TU ; Cheng LEI ; Shuizi DING ; Ting GUO ; Lin WANG ; Ying LIU ; Chenyang LU ; Binyi YANG ; Shi OUYANG ; Ke GONG ; Zhiping TAN ; Yun DENG ; Yueqiu TAN ; Jie QING ; Hong LUO
Frontiers of Medicine 2023;17(5):957-971
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a congenital, motile ciliopathy with pleiotropic symptoms. Although nearly 50 causative genes have been identified, they only account for approximately 70% of definitive PCD cases. Dynein axonemal heavy chain 10 (DNAH10) encodes a subunit of the inner arm dynein heavy chain in motile cilia and sperm flagella. Based on the common axoneme structure of motile cilia and sperm flagella, DNAH10 variants are likely to cause PCD. Using exome sequencing, we identified a novel DNAH10 homozygous variant (c.589C > T, p.R197W) in a patient with PCD from a consanguineous family. The patient manifested sinusitis, bronchiectasis, situs inversus, and asthenoteratozoospermia. Immunostaining analysis showed the absence of DNAH10 and DNALI1 in the respiratory cilia, and transmission electron microscopy revealed strikingly disordered axoneme 9+2 architecture and inner dynein arm defects in the respiratory cilia and sperm flagella. Subsequently, animal models of Dnah10-knockin mice harboring missense variants and Dnah10-knockout mice recapitulated the phenotypes of PCD, including chronic respiratory infection, male infertility, and hydrocephalus. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to report DNAH10 deficiency related to PCD in human and mouse models, which suggests that DNAH10 recessive mutation is causative of PCD.
Humans
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Male
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Animals
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Mice
;
Semen/metabolism*
;
Dyneins/metabolism*
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Cilia/metabolism*
;
Mutation
;
Ciliary Motility Disorders/genetics*
7.Lack of CFAP54 causes primary ciliary dyskinesia in a mouse model and human patients.
Xinyue ZHAO ; Haijun GE ; Wenshuai XU ; Chongsheng CHENG ; Wangji ZHOU ; Yan XU ; Junping FAN ; Yaping LIU ; Xinlun TIAN ; Kai-Feng XU ; Xue ZHANG
Frontiers of Medicine 2023;17(6):1236-1249
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a highly heterogeneous recessive inherited disorder. FAP54, the homolog of CFAP54 in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, was previously demonstrated as the C1d projection of the central microtubule apparatus of flagella. A Cfap54 knockout mouse model was then reported to have PCD-relevant phenotypes. Through whole-exome sequencing, compound heterozygous variants c.2649_2657delinC (p. E883Dfs*47) and c.7312_7313insCGCAGGCTGAATTCTTGG (p. T2438delinsTQAEFLA) in a new suspected PCD-relevant gene, CFAP54, were identified in an individual with PCD. Two missense variants, c.4112A>C (p. E1371A) and c.6559C>T (p. P2187S), in CFAP54 were detected in another unrelated patient. In this study, a minigene assay was conducted on the frameshift mutation showing a reduction in mRNA expression. In addition, a CFAP54 in-frame variant knock-in mouse model was established, which recapitulated the typical symptoms of PCD, including hydrocephalus, infertility, and mucus accumulation in nasal sinuses. Correspondingly, two missense variants were deleterious, with a dramatic reduction in mRNA abundance from bronchial tissue and sperm. The identification of PCD-causing variants of CFAP54 in two unrelated patients with PCD for the first time provides strong supportive evidence that CFAP54 is a new PCD-causing gene. This study further helps expand the disease-associated gene spectrum and improve genetic testing for PCD diagnosis in the future.
Mice
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Animals
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Kartagener Syndrome/metabolism*
;
Cilia/metabolism*
;
Semen
;
Genetic Testing
;
RNA, Messenger
;
Mutation
8.Incidence and genetic reproductive characteristics of AZFc microdeletion among patients with azoospermia or severe oligospermia.
Chiyan ZHOU ; Hui WANG ; Qin ZHU ; Luming WANG ; Binzhen ZHU ; Xiaodan LIU
Chinese Journal of Medical Genetics 2023;40(1):26-30
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the incidence of azoospermia factor c (AZFc) microdeletion among patients with azoospermia or severe oligospermia, its association with sex hormone/chromosomal karyotype, and its effect on the outcome of pregnancy following intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) treatment.
METHODS:
A total of 1 364 males with azoospermia or severe oligospermia who presented at the Affiliated Maternity and Child Health Care Hospital of Jiaxing College between 2013 and 2020 were subjected to AZF microdeletion and chromosome karyotyping analysis. The level of reproductive hormones in patients with AZFc deletions was compared with those of control groups A (with normal sperm indices) and B (azoospermia or severe oligospermia without AZFc microdeletion). The outcome of pregnancies for the AZFc-ICSI couples was compared with that of the control groups in regard to fertilization rate, superior embryo rate and clinical pregnancy rate.
RESULTS:
A total of 51 patients were found to harbor AZFc microdeletion, which yielded a detection rate of 3.74%. Seven patients also had chromosomal aberrations. Compared with control group A, patients with AZFc deletion had higher levels of PRL, FSH and LH (P < 0.05), whilst compared with control group B, only the PRL and FSH were increased (P < 0.05). Twenty two AZFc couples underwent ICSI treatment, and no significant difference was found in the rate of superior embryos and clinical pregnancy between the AZFc-ICSI couples and the control group (P > 0.05).
CONCLUSION
The incidence of AZFc microdeletion was 3.74% among patients with azoospermia or severe oligospermia. AZFc microdeletion was associated with chromosomal aberrations and increased levels of PRL, FSH and LH, but did not affect the clinical pregnancy rate after ICSI treatment.
Child
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Humans
;
Male
;
Female
;
Pregnancy
;
Azoospermia/genetics*
;
Oligospermia/genetics*
;
Incidence
;
Chromosome Deletion
;
Chromosomes, Human, Y/genetics*
;
Semen
;
Infertility, Male/genetics*
;
Chromosome Aberrations
;
Follicle Stimulating Hormone/genetics*
9.Application of single sperm sequencing for the preimplantation genetic testing of a Chinese family affected with Spinal muscular atrophy.
Jia CHEN ; Xingwu WU ; Ge CHEN ; Pengpeng MA ; Wan LU ; Zhihui HUANG ; Cailin XIN ; Yan ZHAO ; Qiongfang WU ; Yanqiu LIU
Chinese Journal of Medical Genetics 2023;40(2):148-154
OBJECTIVE:
To assess the value of single sperm sequencing in preimplantation genetic testing for monogenic disease (PGT-M).
METHODS:
A Chinese couple with two children whom had died of Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) and attended the Jiangxi Provincial Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital in June 2020 was selected as the subject. Eleven single sperm samples were isolated by mechanical immobilization and subjected to whole genome amplification. Real-time PCR and Sanger sequencing were used to detect the SMN1 variants in the single sperm samples. Genomic DNA of the wife, her parents and the husband, as well as one single sperm sample harboring the SMN1 variant and two single sperm samples without the variant were used for the linkage analysis. Targeted capture and high-throughput sequencing were carried out to test 100 single nucleotide polymorphisms distributed within 2 Mb up- and downstream the variant site. The haplotypes linked with the SMN1 variants were determined by linkage analysis. Blastocyst embryos were harvested after fertilizing by intracytoplasmic sperm injection. Cells from the trophoblasts of each embryo were biopsied and subjected to whole genome amplification and targeted capture and high-throughput sequencing to determine their carrier status. Chromosomal aneuploidy of wild-type embryos was excluded. An euploid embryo of high quality was transferred. Amniotic fluid sample was taken at 18 weeks of gestation to confirm the status of the fetus.
RESULTS:
Genetic testing showed that the couple both had deletion of exons 7 ~ 8 of the SMN1 gene. The wife has inherited the deletion from her father, while the husband was de novo. The haplotypes of the husband were successfully constructed by single sperm sequencing. Preimplantation genetic testing has indicated that 5 embryos had harbored the heterozygous variant, 4 embryos were of the wild type, among which 3 were euploid. Prenatal diagnosis during the second trimester of pregnancy has confirmed that the fetus did not carry the deletion.
CONCLUSION
By single sperm sequencing and PGT-M, the birth of further affected child has been successfully avoided.
Humans
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Pregnancy
;
Female
;
Child
;
Male
;
Preimplantation Diagnosis
;
East Asian People
;
Semen
;
Genetic Testing
;
Muscular Atrophy, Spinal/genetics*
;
Aneuploidy
;
Blastocyst/pathology*
;
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
;
Spermatozoa
10.Detection of pathogenic variants in four patients with globozoospermia.
Zhenzhen TANG ; Qingqin LI ; Guoyong CHEN ; Wujian HUANG ; Yulin WANG ; Yu YE ; Peng XIE ; Fenghua LAN ; Duo ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Medical Genetics 2023;40(3):301-307
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the genetic basis for 4 patients with globozoospermia.
METHODS:
Semen and blood samples were collected from the patients for the determination of sperm concentration, viability, survival rate, morphology and acrosome antigen CD46. Meanwhile, DNA was extracted for whole exome sequencing (WES), and candidate variants were validated by Sanger sequencing.
RESULTS:
All of the four patients were found to harbor variants of the DPY19L2 gene. Patients 1 ~ 3 had homozygous deletions of the DPY19L2 gene. Sanger sequencing confirmed that the DPY19L2 gene in patient 3 was disrupted at a recombination breakpoint area BP2, resulting in nonallelic homologous recombination and complete deletion of the DPY19L2 gene. Patients 2 and 3 respectively harbored novel homozygous deletions of exons 2 ~ 22 and exons 14 ~ 15. Patient 4 harbored heterozygous deletion of the DPY19L2 gene, in addition with a rare homozygous deletion of the 3' UTR region.
CONCLUSION
DPY19L2 gene variants probably underlay the globozoospermia in the four patients, which has fit an autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance and the characteristics of genomic diseases.
Male
;
Humans
;
Teratozoospermia/genetics*
;
Homozygote
;
Semen
;
Sequence Deletion
;
3' Untranslated Regions
;
Membrane Proteins

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