Abstract

We have used small-pool PCR to analyse mutation in samples of sperm taken from men after mutagenic therapy. Small-pool PCR uses direct analysis of germline DNA at a highly unstable tandem-repeated “minisatellite” locus to measure rates of length-change mutation in individual sperm samples. The advantages of this approach are that the normal mutation rate is extremely high (about 0.4% per gamete at the locus analysed here), so that relatively small increases in mutation rate can be detectable in individual samples. It is known from work on sperm from untreated individuals that different alleles at this locus have different mutation rates. For this reason, we have analysed the germline mutation rates in sperm samples from two men, in each case comparing a post-treatment sample with a pre-treatment sample from the same individual. We find no evidence for altered mutation in the post-treatment sample, suggesting that the repopulation of the germ-cell compartment after treatment may be subject to stringent mechanisms for the detection and elimination of germ-cell damage.

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