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Showing posts with label Spermatogenesis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spermatogenesis. Show all posts
Wednesday, 20 September 2017
Key regulator of male infertility
The protein complex known as Polycomb Repressive Complex 1 PRC1. PRC1 activates specific germline genes and the production of healthy sperm. It is responsible for production of health male sperm.
Male mammals are born with all the reproductive germline cells and inheritable genetics needed to make healthy fertile sperm and offspring. But the sperm isn't fertile at childhood.
PRC1 also blocks the specific genes and the activation of fertile sperm production until reproductive age.
Researchers show in their current study that when mice reach reproductive age, the PRC1 protein complex changes. It sheds reproductive germline gene components that block fertile sperm production and substitutes in a component that start spermatogenesis.
The repressor of sperm production, PRC1 also promotes gene activation to produce sperm at maturity. The scientists also found that when PRC1 is disrupted, such as in male mice bred to not express PRC1, the animals have smaller testes and are unable to produce healthy sperm or offspring.
haleplushearty.blogspot.com.
Thursday, 15 June 2017
Urogenital infection can cause male infertility
Male infertility contributes to fifty percent of all infertility cases. In 6-10% the cause is an urogenital infection. The
main cause of inflammatory disease in the male genital tract are sexually transmitted pathogens.
The diagnostic evaluation of urogenital infections in most patients with infertility is hindered by an asymptomatic primary chronic disease course.
Asymptomatic inflammatory reactions are found in 25% of men who undergo testicular biopsy for infertility.
It was discovered that after acute inflammation of the epididymis, in 10% of cases no sperm was found in the ejaculate in the long term, and in 30% the number of spermatozoa were reduced; in 60% of men affected by an infection of the epididymis, the testes were affected too.
In such cases, testicular atrophy with permanent loss of spermatogenesis is a much feared complication.
If pathogens are detected in the male genital tract, eradicating antibiotic therapy is indicated.
However, this dies not guarantee that the quality of sperm will not be permanently affected or that the outcome will not be infertility.
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