A homozygous FANCM frameshift pathogenic variant causes male infertility

Hao Yin(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Hui Ma(University of Science and Technology of China), Sajjad Hussain(University of Science and Technology of China), Huan Zhang(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Xuefeng Xie(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Long Jiang(University of Science and Technology of China), Xiaohua Jiang(University of Science and Technology of China), Furhan Iqbal(University of Science and Technology of China), Ihtisham Bukhari(University of Science and Technology of China), Hanwei Jiang(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Asim Ali(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Liangwen Zhong(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Tao Li(University of Science and Technology of China), Suixing Fan(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Beibei Zhang(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Jianing Gao(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Yang Li(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Nazish Jabeen(University of Science and Technology of China), Teka Khan(University of Science and Technology of China), Manan Khan(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Muhammad Zubair(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Qiaomei Hao(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Hui Fang(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Jun Huang(Zhejiang University), Mahmoud Huleihel(Ben-Gurion University of the Negev), Jiahao Sha(Nanjing Medical University), Tej K. Pandita(Houston Methodist), Yuanwei Zhang(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Qinghua Shi(University of Science and Technology of China)
Genetics in Medicine
June 12, 2018
Cited by 118Open Access
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Abstract

PurposeFanconi anemia (FA) genes play important roles in spermatogenesis. In mice, disruption of Fancm impairs male fertility and testicular integrity, but whether FANCM pathogenic variants (PV) similarly affect fertility in men is unknown. Here we characterize a Pakistani family having three infertile brothers, two manifesting oligoasthenospermia and one exhibiting azoospermia, born to first-cousin parents. A homozygous PV in FANCM (c.1946_1958del, p.P648Lfs*16) was found cosegregating with male infertility. Our objective is to validate that FANCM p.P648Lfs*16 is the PV causing infertility in this family.MethodsExome and Sanger sequencing were used for PV screening. DNA interstrand crosslink (ICL) sensitivity was assessed in lymphocytes from patients. A mouse model carrying a PV nearly equivalent to that in the patients (FancmΔC/ΔC) was generated, followed by functional analysis in spermatogenesis.ResultsThe loss-of-function FANCM PV increased ICL sensitivity in lymphocytes of patients and FancmΔC/ΔC spermatogonia. Adult FancmΔC/ΔC mice showed spermatogenic failure, with germ cell loss in 50.2% of testicular tubules and round-spermatid maturation arrest in 43.5% of tubules. In addition, neither bone marrow failure nor cancer/tumor was detected in all the patients or adult FancmΔC/ΔC mice.ConclusionThese findings revealed male infertility to be a novel phenotype of human patients with a biallelic FANCM PV.


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