Journal article

A systematic review of the validated monogenic causes of human male infertility: 2020 update and a discussion of emerging gene-disease relationships

BJ Houston, A Riera-Escamilla, MJ Wyrwoll, A Salas-Huetos, MJ Xavier, L Nagirnaja, C Friedrich, DF Conrad, KI Aston, C Krausz, F Tüttelmann, MK O'bryan, JA Veltman, MS Oud

Human Reproduction Update | Published : 2022

Abstract

Background: Human male infertility has a notable genetic component, including well-established diagnoses such as Klinefelter syndrome, Y-chromosome microdeletions and monogenic causes. Approximately 4% of all infertile men are now diagnosed with a genetic cause, but a majority (60-70%) remain without a clear diagnosis and are classified as unexplained. This is likely in large part due to a delay in the field adopting next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies, and the absence of clear statements from field leaders as to what constitutes a validated cause of human male infertility (the current paper aims to address this). Fortunately, there has been a significant increase in the number of ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

National Health and Medical Research Council APP1120356 to M.K.O.B., J.A.V., D.F.C. and K.I.A. The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (918-15-667) to J.A.V. as well as an Investigator Award in Science from the Wellcome Trust (209451) to J.A.V. German Research Foundation sponsored Clinical Research Unit `Male Germ Cells: from Genes to Function' (DFG, CRU326) to C.F. and F.T. National Institutes of Health: Genomics of Spermatogenic Impairment (R01HD078641) to D.F.C. and K.I.A. Spanish Ministry of Health Instituto Carlos III-FIS-FEDER (Grant number: PI17/01822 PI20/01562) to A.R.-E. and C.K.