Journal of Andrology, Vol. 27, No. 1, January/February 2006
Copyright © American Society of Andrology
DOI: 10.2164/jandrol.05115
Infertile Men With Varicocele Show a High Relative Proportion of Sperm Cells With Intense Nuclear Damage Level, Evidenced by the Sperm Chromatin Dispersion Test
MARÍA ENCISO*,
LOURDES MURIEL
,
JOSÉ LUIS FERNÁNDEZ
,
,
VICENTE GOYANES
,
,
ENRIQUE SEGRELLES
,
MERCEDES MARCOS
,
JUAN MANUEL MONTEJO
,
MANOLO ARDOY
,
ALBERTO PACHECO|| AND
JAIME GOSÁLVEZ*
From the * Unidad de Genética, Facultad de
Biología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain;
Sección de Genética y Unidad de
Investigación, Complejo Hospitalario Universitario Juan Canalejo, As
Xubias, Coruña, Spain;
ARGGORA Unidad
de la Mujer, A Coruña, Spain;
Unidad de
Andrología, Servicio de Bioquímica, Hospital La Paz, Madrid,
Spain; and || Servicio de Andrología,
IVI-Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
|
Correspondence to: Dr José Luis Fernández, Sección de
Genética y Unidad de Investigación, Complejo Hospitalario
Universitario Juan Canalejo, As Xubias, 84, 15006-A Coruña, Spain
(e-mail:
JLFernandez{at}canalejo.org
or
genetica{at}cog.es). |
The frequency of sperm cells with fragmented DNA was studied in a group of
18 infertile patients with varicocele and compared with those obtained in a
group of 51 normozoospermic patients, 103 patients with abnormal standard
semen parameters, and 22 fertile men. The spermatozoa were processed to
discriminate different levels of DNA fragmentation using the Halosperm®
kit, an improved Sperm Chromatin Dispersion (SCD) test. In this technique,
after an acid incubation and subsequent lysis, those sperm cells without DNA
fragmentation show big or medium-sized halos of dispersion of DNA loops from
the central nuclear core. Otherwise, those spermatozoa containing fragmented
DNA either show a small halo, exhibit no halo with solid staining of the core,
or show no halo and irregular or faint stain of the remaining core. The
latter, that is, degraded type, corresponds to a much higher level of
DNA-nuclear damage. The varicocele patients showed 32.4% ± 22.3% of
spermatozoa with fragmented DNA, significantly different from the group of
fertile subjects (12.6% ± 5.0%). Nevertheless, this was not different
from that of normozoospermic patients (31.3% ± 16.6%) (P =
.83) and with abnormal semen parameters (36.6% ± 15.5%) (P =
.31). No significant differences were found between the normozoospermic
patients and the patients with abnormal semen parameters. Strikingly, the
proportion of the degraded cells in the total of sperm cells with fragmented
DNA was 1 out of 4.2 (23.9% ± 12.9%) in the case of varicocele
patients, whereas it was 1 out of 8.2 to 9.7 in the normozoospermic patients
(11.1% ± 9.9%) in the patients with abnormal sperm parameters (12.2%
± 8.3%) and in the fertile group (10.3% ± 7.2%). Thus, whereas
no differences in the percentage of sperm cells with fragmented DNA were
evident with respect to other infertile patients, individuals with varicocele
exhibit a higher yield of sperm cells with the greatest nuclear DNA damage
level in the population with fragmented DNA. This finding illustrates the
value of assessing different patterns of DNA-nuclear damage within each sperm
cell and the particular ability of the Halosperm® kit to reveal them.
Key words: Human sperm, DNA fragmentation
Copyright © 2006 by The American Society of Andrology.