Abstract

BackgroundPartial and mixed gonadal dysgenesis (PGD and MGD) are characterized by genital ambiguity and the finding of either a streak gonad and a dysgenetic testis or two dysgenetic testes. The karyotype in PGD is 46,XY, whereas a 45,X/46,XY mosaicism or its variants (more than two lineages and/or structural abnormalities of the Y chromosome) is generally found in MGD. Such mosaics are also compatible with female phenotype and Turner syndrome, ovotesticular disorder of sex development, and infertility in men with normal external genitalia. During the last few years, evidences of a linkage between Y microdeletions and 45,X mosaicism have been reported. There are also indications that the instability caused by such deletions might be more significant in germ cells. The aim of this work was to investigate the presence of Y chromosome microdeletions in individuals with PGD and in those with 45,X/46,XY mosaicism or its variants and variable phenotypes.MethodsOur sample comprised 13 individuals with PGD and 15 with mosaicism, most of them with a MGD phenotype (n = 11). Thirty-six sequence tagged sites (STS) spanning the male specific region (MSY) on the Y chromosome (Yp, centromere and Yq) were analyzed by multiplex PCR and some individual reactions.ResultsAll STS showed positive amplifications in the PGD group. Conversely, in the group with mosaicism, six individuals with MGD had been identified with Yq microdeletions, two of them without structural abnormalities of the Y chromosome by routine cytogenetic analysis. The deleted STSs were located within AZFb and AZFc (Azoospermia Factor) regions, which harbor several genes responsible for spermatogenesis.ConclusionsAbsence of deletions in individuals with PGD does not confirm the hypothesis that instability of the Y chromosome in the gonads could be one of the causes of such condition. However, deletions identified in the second group indicate that mosaicism may be associated with Y chromosome abnormalities detectable only at the molecular level. If patients with mosaicism and Y microdeletions reared as males decide to undergo in vitro fertilization, Y chromosomes which tend to be unstable during cell division may be transmitted to offspring.

Highlights

  • Partial and mixed gonadal dysgenesis (PGD and Mixed gonadal dysgenesis (MGD)) are characterized by genital ambiguity and the finding of either a streak gonad and a dysgenetic testis or two dysgenetic testes

  • The aim of this work was to investigate the presence of Y chromosome microdeletions in individuals with 45,X/46,XY mosaicism and its variants bearing different phenotypes and in patients with partial gonadal dysgenesis (PGD), in order to verify if the instability of Y chromosome might be one of the causes of such disorders of gonadal differentiation

  • The present study did not detect Y chromosome microdeletions in the 13 subjects with PGD and normal 46,XY karyotype, the hypothesis that abnormalities at the molecular level leading to loss of the Y chromosome in gonadal cell lines play a role in the etiology of this disorder was not supported

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Summary

Introduction

Partial and mixed gonadal dysgenesis (PGD and MGD) are characterized by genital ambiguity and the finding of either a streak gonad and a dysgenetic testis or two dysgenetic testes. The karyotype in PGD is 46,XY, whereas a 45,X/46,XY mosaicism or its variants (more than two lineages and/or structural abnormalities of the Y chromosome) is generally found in MGD. Such mosaics are compatible with female phenotype and Turner syndrome, ovotesticular disorder of sex development, and infertility in men with normal external genitalia. Individuals with partial gonadal dysgenesis (PGD) are characterized by genital ambiguity due to variable degrees of testicular dysgenesis, absence of syndromic picture and 46,XY karyotype. The etiology of most cases of PGD is unknown; mutations in SRY (sex determining region Y) gene are rarely seen [3,4,5], and in recent years mutations in NR5A1 (Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 5, Group A, Member 1) gene were found in a few patients [6,7,8]

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