New! Sign up for our free email newsletter.
Science News
from research organizations

Mutation may cause early loss of sperm supply

Date:
March 2, 2015
Source:
Brown University
Summary:
Problems in a gene responsible for producing the protein TAF4b leave mice -- and maybe men -- unable to sustain sperm production. As embryos, mice lacking the protein failed to develop an adequate number of key cells in the sperm production process and as adults they quickly lost their initial fertility.
Share:
FULL STORY

Brown University biologists have determined how the loss of a gene in male mice results in the premature exhaustion of their fertility. Their fundamental new insights into the complex process of sperm generation may have direct applications to a similar loss of fertility in men.

What the team discovered is that the loss of the gene that makes the protein TAF4b causes a deficit in the number of progenitor cells at an embryonic stage of a male mouse's reproductive development. Lacking those important precursor cells means that the mice struggle to develop a robust stem cell infrastructure to sustain sperm production for the long term. The affected mice are fertile at first, but quickly deplete the limited sperm supply that they can generate.

"What's fascinating about these mice is they can reproduce," said Richard Freiman, senior author of the new study in the journal Stem Cells. "Mice can usually reproduce until they are two years old, but these mice can only reproduce until they are four months old."

TAF4b is a protein that affects how genes are regulated and transcribed, and its absence has profound impacts on the reproductive system. In previous work, Freiman's research group has shown that female mice without TAF4b are totally infertile and that their ovaries age prematurely. But in experiments with males, led by lab members Lindsay Lovasco and Eric Gustafson, the effect proved more subtle.

Sperm generation follows from a complex chain of events that the research shows begins before a male mouse is even born. In their experiments, the team compared the development of mice with and without the TAF4b gene. In mice with TAF4b, progenitor cells for sperm in the male embryo arise and proliferate normally, laying the groundwork in the testes for a robust pool of spermatogonial stem cells to develop. Those stem cells are the ones that produce a renewable supply of sperm. Without TAF4b, there were fewer progenitor cells and consequently fewer stem cells. They still produce sperm at first, but they can't renew production for the long haul. Ultimately the testes, which develop normally, become unproductive and atrophy.

What's not yet clear from the research is why the process fades out rather than just continuing, albeit at a very low level of productivity. One possibility is the low supply of spermatogonial stem cells drives the body to invest all its meager resources in immediate sperm production, leaving none of the stem cells in a more flexible state that can perpetually renew the supply. Another possibility is that regardless of supply, TAF4b is simply needed to see the renewal process through, for instance by maintaining some stem cells in their regenerative state.

Four Turkish brothers

Not only do humans have a gene for TAF4b, but a coincidental study last year in the Journal of Medical Genetics provides evidence that it also matters for sperm count. That research reported that four Turkish brothers who carried a mutation in the TAF4b gene had low sperm counts. Their mutation was in the same region of their gene as the one Freiman's team generated in the mice.

"The human implications are very exciting," he said. "It is possible that those men, as teenagers, were able to make functional sperm."

Certainly more research is needed, Freiman said, but if TAF4b mutation plays out in men the way it plays out in mice, his hope is that detecting the mutation in teenage boys could allow doctors to freeze their sperm so that when they are older and want to have children, they could draw on that banked supply.

"This is why fundamental knowledge is so important," Freiman said. "If we understand the process, we might be able to do something we couldn't do before."

The research also suggests the importance of development, even at the embryonic stage, to later life.

"Developmental processes that occur in embryogenesis really have a profound affect on the ability of adult organ systems to function properly," Freiman said. "This may be an example where a deficit during embryogenesis may preclude the ability of these mice to reproduce as adults."


Story Source:

Materials provided by Brown University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal References:

  1. O. Ayhan, M. Balkan, A. Guven, R. Hazan, M. Atar, A. Tok, A. Tolun. Truncating mutations in TAF4B and ZMYND15 causing recessive azoospermia. Journal of Medical Genetics, 2014; 51 (4): 239 DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2013-102102
  2. Lindsay A. Lovasco, Eric A. Gustafson, Kimberly A. Seymour, Dirk G. de Rooij, Richard N. Freiman. TAF4b is required for mouse spermatogonial stem cell development. STEM CELLS, 2015; DOI: 10.1002/stem.1914

Cite This Page:

Brown University. "Mutation may cause early loss of sperm supply." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 2 March 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/03/150302105205.htm>.
Brown University. (2015, March 2). Mutation may cause early loss of sperm supply. ScienceDaily. Retrieved April 20, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/03/150302105205.htm
Brown University. "Mutation may cause early loss of sperm supply." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/03/150302105205.htm (accessed April 20, 2024).

Explore More

from ScienceDaily

RELATED STORIES