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Publication : Targeted disruption of Nphp1 causes male infertility due to defects in the later steps of sperm morphogenesis in mice.

First Author  Jiang ST Year  2008
Journal  Hum Mol Genet Volume  17
Issue  21 Pages  3368-79
PubMed ID  18684731 Mgi Jnum  J:140205
Mgi Id  MGI:3812271 Doi  10.1093/hmg/ddn231
Citation  Jiang ST, et al. (2008) Targeted disruption of Nphp1 causes male infertility due to defects in the later steps of sperm morphogenesis in mice. Hum Mol Genet 17(21):3368-79
abstractText  Juvenile nephronophthisis type I is the most common genetic disorder causing end-stage renal failure in children and young adults. The defective gene responsible has been identified as NPHP1. Its gene product, nephrocystin-1, is a novel protein of uncertain function that is widely expressed in many tissues and not just confined to the kidney. To gain insight into the physiological function of nephrocystin, Nphp1-targeted mutant mice were generated by homologous recombination. Interestingly, homozygous Nphp1 mutant mice were viable without renal manifestations of nephronophthisis. They appeared normal, but males were infertile with oligoteratozoospermia. Histological analysis of the seminiferous tubules showed that spermatogenesis was blocked at the early stages of spermatid elongation, with degenerating spermatids sloughing off into the lumen. Electron microscopic analysis revealed detachment of early elongating spermatids from Sertoli cells, and a failure of sperm head and tail morphogenesis. However, a few mature spermatozoa were still deposited in the epididymis, though they were frequently dead, immotile, or malformed. These novel findings indicate that nephrocystin is critically required for the differentiation of early elongating spermatids into spermatozoa in mice. The possible roles of nephrocystin in the formation and maintenance of Sertoli-spermatid junctions are still under investigation.
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