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Bi-allelic human TEKT3 mutations cause male infertility with oligoasthenoteratozoospermia due to acrosomal hypoplasia and reduced progressive motility.

Yiyuan LiuYuqian LiLanlan MengKuokuo LiYang GaoMingrong LvRui GuoYuping XuPing ZhouZhaolian WeiXiaojin HeYunxia CaoHuan WuYue-Qiu TanRong Hua
Published in: Human molecular genetics (2023)
Oligoasthenoteratozoospermia (OAT) can result in male infertility due to reduced sperm motility and abnormal spermatozoan morphology. The Tektins are a family of highly conserved filamentous proteins expressed in the axoneme and associated structures in many different metazoan species. Earlier studies on mice identified Tektin3 (Tekt3) as a testis-enriched gene, and knockout of Tekt3 resulted in asthenozoospermia in the mice. Here, whole exome sequencing of 100 males with asthenozoospermia from unrelated families was performed, followed by Sanger sequencing, leading to the identification of TEKT3 as a candidate gene in two of these patients and their associated family members. In total, three mutations in the TEKT3 gene were identified in both these patients, including one homozygous deletion-insertion mutation (c.543_547delinsTTGAT: p.Glu182*) and one compound heterozygous mutation (c.[548G > A]; [752A > C], p.[(Arg183Gln)]; [(Gln251Pro)]). Both of these mutations resulted in the complete loss of TEKT3 expression. The patients were both found to produce sperm that, although they showed no apparent defects in the flagellar structure, had reduced progressive motility. In contrast to mice, most sperm from these two patients exhibited acrosomal hypoplasia, although this did not prevent the use of the sperm for in vitro fertilization through an ICSI approach. TEKT3 was found to bind to other TEKT proteins, suggesting that these proteins form a complex within human spermatozoa. Overall, these results suggest that a loss of TEKT3 function can contribute to OAT incidence in humans. TEKT3 deficiencies can reduce sperm motility and contribute to severe acrosomal hypoplasia in spermatozoa, compromising their normal function.
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