نتایج جستجو برای: azfc

تعداد نتایج: 269  

2017
Prafulla S. Ambulkar Sunil S. Pande

Genetic factors cause about 15% of male infertility and microdeletions of Y chromosome is one of the genetic causes in idiopathic infertile men. Azoospermia factors (AZFa, AZFb, and AZFc) on Yq long arm are most important for spermatogenesis. For analysis of microdeletions in the AZF regions by sequence-tagged-site (STS) PCR is important screening method for infertility. An attempt has been mad...

Journal: : 2023

Để nhận biết các đặc điểm lâm sàng, cận sàng và xác định bất thường di truyền liên quan đến tình trạng OAT, chúng tôi tiến hành nghiên cứu trên 253 bệnh nhân nam vô sinh mắc hội chứng OAT. Kết quả cho thấy tuổi trung bình của trong là 29,3 ± 6,04 tuổi. Tiền sử viêm tinh hoàn do quai bị, giãn tĩnh mạch chiếm tỉ lệ khá cao, lần lượt 12,65% 23,32%. Nồng độ hormon FSH, LH, Testosterone huyết thanh ...

Journal: :Human reproduction 1999
D C Page S Silber L G Brown

Deletion of the AZFc region of the Y chromosome is the most frequent molecularly defined cause of spermatogenic failure. We report three unrelated men in whom azoospermia or severe oligozoospermia was caused by de-novo AZFc deletions, and who produced sons by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). We employed polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays to examine the Y chromosomes of their four in...

Journal: :Genetics and molecular research : GMR 2007
J T Arruda B M Bordin P R Santos W E J C Mesquita R C P C Silva M C S Maia M S Approbato R S Florêncio W N Amaral M A Rocha Filho K K V O Moura

Microdeletions in Yq are associated with defects in spermatogenesis, while those in the AZF region are considered critical for germ cell development. We examined microdeletions in the Y chromosomes of patients attended at the Laboratory of Human Reproduction of the Clinical Hospital of the Federal University of Goiás as part of a screening of patients who plan to undergo assisted reproduction. ...

Journal: :Genetics and molecular research : GMR 2015
L L Li Y Z Zhu X W Yu R X Wang Z M Hu R Z Liu

Y chromosome microdeletions can cause male infertility and are classified as natural transmission and de novo mutations. To examine the source of these deletions in Chinese men and to provide a theoretical and laboratory basis for genetic counseling, patients from Northeast China with primary male infertility (N = 22) and their fathers were investigated. Karyotype analysis was performed on peri...

Journal: :Andrologia 2016
L Alimardanian K Saliminejad S Razi A Ahani

Microdeletions of the azoospermia factor (AZF) regions in the Y chromosome are a well-known genetic cause of male infertility, resulting in impairment of spermatogenesis. However, the partial deletions of AZFc region related to spermatogenetic impairment are controversial. We investigated partial deletion of AZFc region and DAZ copy number in a population of Iranian infertile men and normozoosp...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2013
Ying Shen Yuanlong Yan Yunqiang Liu Sizhong Zhang Dong Yang Peng Zhang Lei Li Yan Wang Yongxin Ma Dachang Tao Yuan Yang

AZFc deletions cause a significant phenotypic heterogeneity with respect to spermatogenesis; however, the reason for this is poorly understood. Recently, testis-specific protein Y-encoded 1 (TSPY1) copy number variation (CNV) was determined to be a potential genetic modifier of spermatogenesis. We performed a large-scale cohort study to investigate the effect of TSPY1 CNV on spermatogenesis and...

Journal: :Human reproduction 1998
R A Brandell A Mielnik D Liotta Z Ye L L Veeck G D Palermo P N Schlegel

Genetic abnormalities, including partial deletions of the Y-chromosome, are commonly detectable in men with non-obstructive azoospermia (NOA). NOA can be treated using testicular sperm extraction (TESE) with intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Recent studies have shown that the presence of deletions involving the AZFc region do not appear to affect the chance of retrieving spermatozoa or h...

Journal: :Genomics 2004
Sjoerd Repping Saskia K M van Daalen Cindy M Korver Laura G Brown Janet D Marszalek Judith Gianotten Robert D Oates Sherman Silber Fulco van der Veen David C Page Steve Rozen

The human Y chromosome is replete with amplicons-very large, nearly identical repeats-which render it susceptible to interstitial deletions that often cause spermatogenic failure. Here we describe a recurrent, 1.8-Mb deletion that removes half of the azoospermia factor c (AZFc) region, including 12 members of eight testis-specific gene families. We show that this "b2/b3" deletion arose at least...

Journal: :Human reproduction 2005
K Hucklenbroich J Gromoll M Heinrich C Hohoff E Nieschlag M Simoni

BACKGROUND Partial deletions of the AZFc region of the Y chromosome were reported to be a significant risk factor for oligo-/azoospermia. In this study, we assessed the occurrence and frequency of partial AZFc microdeletions in patients with spermatogenic failure and in controls with normal spermatogenesis. METHODS In a retrospective study design, gr/gr, b1/b3 and b2/b3 deletions were analyse...

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