Background: In the work up of male infertility, Y chromosome microdeletion screening is crucial. PCR is a very sensitive technique to screen Y chromosome microdeletion. In the current study, Y chromosome microdeletion was detected by PCR based technique. To the best of our knowledge, no such study has been reported from Chhattishgarh state of India so far. Material and methods: A total of seventy-three subjects were enrolled for the study during the period of one year. Out of which forty-seven subjects were cases (infertile men with oligozoospermia and azoospermia) and twenty-five were controls (with normozoospermia and having child). Semen analysis was done in each case to evaluate spermatogenesis status. Sperm DNA fragmentation by sperm chromatin dispersion of cases with oligozoopermia was also performed to detect DNA fragmentation Index. Results: Y chromosome microdeletion was observed in one out of forty-seven infertile males who were oligozoospermic or azoospermic. The type of deletion was AZFbc. Thus 2.12% men among oligozoospermic or azoospermic men have Y chromosome microdeletion in Chhattisgarh. Conclusion: In Indian population, AZFbc deletion has been found to be the second commonest type of deletion. In our study, we have also found this as the only deletion. This test also provides etiological interpretation of male infertility to the patient. We believe that awareness about transmission of deleted gene to the offspring could prevent infertility up to certain extent in the affected couples.
Published in | International Journal of Genetics and Genomics (Volume 9, Issue 2) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12 |
Page(s) | 36-41 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Azoospermic Factor (AZF), Oligozoospermic, Yq Microdeletion
[1] | Krauze C, Degl’Innocenti S. Y chromosome and male infertility: update 2006. Front Biosci 2006; 11: 3049-61. |
[2] | Sen S, Pasi AR, Dada R, Shamsi MB, Modi D. Y chromosome microdeletion in infertile men: prevalence, phenotypes and screening markers for Indian population. J Assist Reprod Genet 2013; 30: 413-422. |
[3] | Krausz C, Murci LQ, Elreavey K Mc. Prognostic value of Y chromosome micro deletion analysis, Hum Reprod 2000; 15: 1431–1434. |
[4] | Hopps CV, Mielnik A, Goldstein M, Palermo GD, Rosenwaks Z, Schlegel PN. Detection of sperm in men with Y chromosome microdeletions of the AZFa, AZFb and AZFc regions. Hum Reprod 2003; 18: 1660–1665. |
[5] | Kuhnert B, Nieschlag E. Reproductive functions of the ageing male. Hum Reprod Update. 2004; 10 (4): 327-39. |
[6] | Longepied G, Saut N, Aknin-Seifer I, Levy R, Frances AM, MetzlerGuillemain C, Guichaoua MR, Mitchell MJ. Complete deletion of the AZFb interval from the Y chromosome in an oligozoospermic man. Hum Reprod 2010; 25: 2655–2663. |
[7] | Soares AR, Costa P, Silva J, Sousa M, Barros A & Fernandes S. AZFb microdeletions and oligozoospermia–which mechanisms? Fertil Steril 2012; 97: 858–863. |
[8] | Mitra A, Dada R, Kumar R, Gupta NP, Kucheria K, Gupta SK. Screening for Y Chromosome microdeletion in infertile Indian males: utility of simplified multiplex PCR. Indian J Med Res 2008; 127: 124-32. |
[9] | Simoni M, Bakker E, Eurlings MCM, Matthijs G, Moro E, Muller CR, Vogt PH. Laboratory guidelines for molecular diagnosis of Y-chromosomal microdeletions. Int J Androl 1999; 22 (5): 292-299. |
[10] | Babu S R, Swarna M, Padmavathi P, Reddy PP, PCR analysis of Yqmicrodeletions in infertile males, a study from South India. Asian J of Androl. 2002; 4: 265-8. |
[11] | Amirjannati N, Heidari-Vala H, Akhondi MA, Hosseini Jadda SH, Kamali K, Sadeghi MR. Comparison of intracytoplasmic sperm injection outcomes between spermatozoa retrieved from testicular biopsy and from ejaculation in cryptozoospermic men. Andrologia 2012; 44: 704–709. |
[12] | Sakthivel PJ and Swaminathan M. Y Chromosome microdeletion in sperm DNA of infertile patients from Tamilnadu, southIndia. Indian J Urol 2008; 24: 480-5. |
[13] | Suganthi R, Manonayaki S, Benazir JF. Molecular analysis of Y-chromosome microdeletions in infertile men. Int J of Med Sci. 2009; 2 (1): 54-60. |
[14] | Prafulla S, Ambulkar, Pande SS. Male Infertility: Screening of Azoospermia factor (AZF) microdeletion in Idiopathic infertile men. JEBAS 2017; 5 (1): 007-013. |
[15] | Thangaraj K, Gupta NJ, Pavani K, Reddy AG, Subramainan S, Rani DS, et al. Y chromosome deletions in azoospermic men in India. J Androl 2003; 24: 588–97 |
[16] | Mittal R D, Singh G, Srivastava A, Pradhan M, Kesari A, Makker A, Mittal B. Y-chromosome microdeletions in idiopathic infertility from northern India. Annales de Genetique 2004; 5 (3): 331-337. |
[17] | Kamp C, Hirschmann P, Voss H, Huellen K, Vogt PH. Two long homologus retoviral sequence block in proximal Yq11 causes AZFa microdeletion as result of intrachromosomal recombination. Hum Mol Genet 2000; 9: 2563-2572. |
[18] | Robinowitz MJ, Huffman PJ, Haney NM, Kohn TP. Y-chromosome Microdeletion: A review of prevalence, Screening, and clinical Considerations. The application of Clinical Genetics 2021: 14; 51-59. |
[19] | Suganthi R, Vjesh VV, Vandana N, Benazir JAF. Y-chromosome microdeletion screening in the workup of male infertility and its current status in india. Int J Fertility and sterility. 2014; 7 (4): 253-266. |
[20] | Vijaylakshmi J, Venkatachalam P, Reddy S. Usha Ran G, Manjula G. Microdeletions of AZFc Region in Infertile Men with Azoospermia and Oligoasthenoteratozoospermia. Int J Human Gen 2013; 13 (4): 183-187. |
APA Style
Manisha Barnwal Sinha, Rima Dada, Suprava Patel, Apoorva Joshi, Nilaj Bagde, et al. (2021). Frequency of Deletion of AZF Region of the Y Chromosome in Chhattishgarh, India. International Journal of Genetics and Genomics, 9(2), 36-41. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12
ACS Style
Manisha Barnwal Sinha; Rima Dada; Suprava Patel; Apoorva Joshi; Nilaj Bagde, et al. Frequency of Deletion of AZF Region of the Y Chromosome in Chhattishgarh, India. Int. J. Genet. Genomics 2021, 9(2), 36-41. doi: 10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12
AMA Style
Manisha Barnwal Sinha, Rima Dada, Suprava Patel, Apoorva Joshi, Nilaj Bagde, et al. Frequency of Deletion of AZF Region of the Y Chromosome in Chhattishgarh, India. Int J Genet Genomics. 2021;9(2):36-41. doi: 10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12
@article{10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12, author = {Manisha Barnwal Sinha and Rima Dada and Suprava Patel and Apoorva Joshi and Nilaj Bagde and Human Prasad Sinha}, title = {Frequency of Deletion of AZF Region of the Y Chromosome in Chhattishgarh, India}, journal = {International Journal of Genetics and Genomics}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {36-41}, doi = {10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijgg.20210902.12}, abstract = {Background: In the work up of male infertility, Y chromosome microdeletion screening is crucial. PCR is a very sensitive technique to screen Y chromosome microdeletion. In the current study, Y chromosome microdeletion was detected by PCR based technique. To the best of our knowledge, no such study has been reported from Chhattishgarh state of India so far. Material and methods: A total of seventy-three subjects were enrolled for the study during the period of one year. Out of which forty-seven subjects were cases (infertile men with oligozoospermia and azoospermia) and twenty-five were controls (with normozoospermia and having child). Semen analysis was done in each case to evaluate spermatogenesis status. Sperm DNA fragmentation by sperm chromatin dispersion of cases with oligozoopermia was also performed to detect DNA fragmentation Index. Results: Y chromosome microdeletion was observed in one out of forty-seven infertile males who were oligozoospermic or azoospermic. The type of deletion was AZFbc. Thus 2.12% men among oligozoospermic or azoospermic men have Y chromosome microdeletion in Chhattisgarh. Conclusion: In Indian population, AZFbc deletion has been found to be the second commonest type of deletion. In our study, we have also found this as the only deletion. This test also provides etiological interpretation of male infertility to the patient. We believe that awareness about transmission of deleted gene to the offspring could prevent infertility up to certain extent in the affected couples.}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Frequency of Deletion of AZF Region of the Y Chromosome in Chhattishgarh, India AU - Manisha Barnwal Sinha AU - Rima Dada AU - Suprava Patel AU - Apoorva Joshi AU - Nilaj Bagde AU - Human Prasad Sinha Y1 - 2021/06/21 PY - 2021 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12 DO - 10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12 T2 - International Journal of Genetics and Genomics JF - International Journal of Genetics and Genomics JO - International Journal of Genetics and Genomics SP - 36 EP - 41 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2376-7359 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijgg.20210902.12 AB - Background: In the work up of male infertility, Y chromosome microdeletion screening is crucial. PCR is a very sensitive technique to screen Y chromosome microdeletion. In the current study, Y chromosome microdeletion was detected by PCR based technique. To the best of our knowledge, no such study has been reported from Chhattishgarh state of India so far. Material and methods: A total of seventy-three subjects were enrolled for the study during the period of one year. Out of which forty-seven subjects were cases (infertile men with oligozoospermia and azoospermia) and twenty-five were controls (with normozoospermia and having child). Semen analysis was done in each case to evaluate spermatogenesis status. Sperm DNA fragmentation by sperm chromatin dispersion of cases with oligozoopermia was also performed to detect DNA fragmentation Index. Results: Y chromosome microdeletion was observed in one out of forty-seven infertile males who were oligozoospermic or azoospermic. The type of deletion was AZFbc. Thus 2.12% men among oligozoospermic or azoospermic men have Y chromosome microdeletion in Chhattisgarh. Conclusion: In Indian population, AZFbc deletion has been found to be the second commonest type of deletion. In our study, we have also found this as the only deletion. This test also provides etiological interpretation of male infertility to the patient. We believe that awareness about transmission of deleted gene to the offspring could prevent infertility up to certain extent in the affected couples. VL - 9 IS - 2 ER -