Artigo Revisado por pares

ICSI and the transmission of X-autosomal translocation: a three-generation evaluation of X;20 translocation: Case report

2003; Oxford University Press; Volume: 18; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/humrep/deg247

ISSN

1460-2350

Autores

Sai Ma, Basil Ho Yuen, Maria S. Peñaherrera, David Koehn, Larry Ness, Wendy P. Robinson,

Tópico(s)

CRISPR and Genetic Engineering

Resumo

Published reports show that male carriers of an X-autosome translocation, which is either inherited from their mother or is de novo, are generally sterile, regardless of the position of the breakpoint in the X chromosome. We report a three-generation propagation of such a translocation in a family with a case of male factor infertility. Due to the condition of severe oligozoospermia, the proband and his wife underwent ICSI, which resulted in the birth of a normal healthy female. Cytogenetic (chromosome) analyses and X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) assays were done on the family. The cytogenetic analysis of the proband, a man with severe oligozoospermia, revealed an X-autosomal translocation, 46,Y,t(X;20)(q10;q10), which was inherited from his mother. His brother had the same translocation. Amniocentesis and post-natal umbilical cord analyses revealed that the female infant carried the same translocation as her father. XCI studies showed highly skewed inactivation of the normal X chromosome in the female infant, her paternal grandmother, and her mother who had a normal karyotype. In contrast to the data from the literature, our study suggests that men with a certain type of X-autosomal translocation could conceive children through ICSI in conditions in which a few spermatogonia are able to complete meiosis II. The literature involving X-autosomal translocation in males is also reviewed and the importance of the study of X-chromosomal inactivation in female infants discussed.

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