Multiple ageing effects on testicular/epididymal germ cells lead to decreased male fertility in mice.
Tsutomu EndoKiyonori KobayashiTakafumi MatsumuraChihiro EmoriManabu OzawaShimpei KawamotoDaisuke OkuzakiKeisuke ShimadaHaruhiko MiyataKentaro ShimadaMayo KodaniYu Ishikawa-YamauchiDaisuke MotookaEiji HaraMasahito IkawaPublished in: Communications biology (2024)
In mammals, females undergo reproductive cessation with age, whereas male fertility gradually declines but persists almost throughout life. However, the detailed effects of ageing on germ cells during and after spermatogenesis, in the testis and epididymis, respectively, remain unclear. Here we comprehensively examined the in vivo male fertility and the overall organization of the testis and epididymis with age, focusing on spermatogenesis, and sperm function and fertility, in mice. We first found that in vivo male fertility decreased with age, which is independent of mating behaviors and testosterone levels. Second, overall sperm production in aged testes was decreased; about 20% of seminiferous tubules showed abnormalities such as germ cell depletion, sperm release failure, and perturbed germ cell associations, and the remaining 80% of tubules contained lower number of germ cells because of decreased proliferation of spermatogonia. Further, the spermatozoa in aged epididymides exhibited decreased total cell numbers, abnormal morphology/structure, decreased motility, and DNA damage, resulting in low fertilizing and developmental rates. We conclude that these multiple ageing effects on germ cells lead to decreased in vivo male fertility. Our present findings are useful to better understand the basic mechanism behind the ageing effect on male fertility in mammals including humans.