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Publication : C9orf131 and C10orf120 are not essential for male fertility in humans or mice.

First Author  He J Year  2023
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  497
Pages  11-17 PubMed ID  36871790
Mgi Jnum  J:334544 Mgi Id  MGI:7450668
Doi  10.1016/j.ydbio.2023.02.009 Citation  He J, et al. (2023) C9orf131 and C10orf120 are not essential for male fertility in humans or mice. Dev Biol 497:11-17
abstractText  Male infertility affects approximately 7% of childbearing couples and is a major health issue. Although nearly 50% idiopathic infertile men are assumed to have a genetic basis, the underlying causes remain largely unknown in most infertility cases. Here, we report two rare homozygous variants in two previously uncharacterized genes, C9orf131 and C10orf120, identified in two unrelated men with asthenozoospermia. Both genes were predominantly expressed in the testes. Furthermore, C9orf131 and C10orf120 knockout mice were successfully generated using the CRISPR-Cas9 technology. However, both C9orf131(-/-) and C10orf120(-/-) adult male mice were fertile, with testis-to-body weight ratios comparable to those of wild-type mice. No overt differences were found between wild-type, C9orf131(-/-), and C10orf120(-/-) mice regarding testicular/epididymal tissue morphology, sperm count, sperm motility, or sperm morphology. Moreover, TUNEL assays indicated that the number of apoptotic germ cells in testes was not significantly different between the three groups. In summary, these findings suggest that C9orf131 and C10orf120 are redundant genes in male infertility.
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