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Infertility in a man with oligoasthenozoospermia associated with mosaic chromosome 22q11 deletion.

BACKGROUND: A 30-year-old oligoasthenozoospermia man was found to have unbalance mosaic translocation between chromosome 22 and four other chromosomes (5, 6, 13, and 15) during the investigations for a couple with infertility for 3 years, which is a rare event in human pathology.

METHODS: Classical cytogenetics analysis, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and chromosome microarray analyses (CMA) were performed on peripheral blood lymphocytes; copy number variation sequencing (CNV-Seq) analysis was performed on sperm DNA.

RESULTS: Classical cytogenetics analysis showed the presence of six cell lines on peripheral blood lymphocytes: 45, XY, der (13) t(13;22),-22[10]/46, XY, t(13;22)[6]/45, XY, der(15)t(15;22),-22[4]/46, XY, t(13;22)[1]/45, XY, der(5)t(5;22),-22[1]/45, XY, der(6)t(6;22)[1]. FISH and CMA performed on peripheral blood cells showed the presence of a 6.9 Mb mosaic 22q11 deletion (approximately 50% of cells); it is unexpected that the phenotypes of this man were merely oligoasthenozoospermia, mild bradycardia, and mild tricuspid regurgitation. CNV-Seq analysis performed on sperm DNA revealed the rate of 22q11 deletion cells was obviously lower compared with peripheral blood cells. And the frequency of gametes exhibiting a normal or balance chromosomal equipment was above 80% in sperm samples.

CONCLUSION: To the best of our knowledge, this report is the first case of a de novo gonosomal mosaic of chromosome 22q11 deletion just associated with male infertility.

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