Affordable in home care | starts at $28 per hr

408-854-1883 starts at $30 per hr home care

Study reveals gene’s role in male infertility

By Tom Gresham

Study reveals gene's role in male infertility
In this figure a transmission electron microscopic image (top) shows the array of manchette microtubules running lateral to the nucleus and extending toward the forming sperm tail. In the confocal fluorescence images (bottom) SPAG16 protein …more

A Virginia Commonwealth University-led research team has opened a fresh direction in the field of male infertility with a new study that examines the role of a particular gene in the formation of sperm flagella, which is the appendage that propels sperm.

The paper, “Intraflagellar Transport Protein IFT20 is Essential for Male Fertility and Spermiogenesis in Mice,” was published online in Molecular Biology of the Cell. It will be published in a future print issue of the journal. In the paper, researchers studied the role of the intraflagellar transport protein IFT20 in male germ cell development. They learned that the gene was important for sperm flagella formation and therefore . Without flagella, sperm cannot swim.

“Our studies suggest that IFT20 is essential for male fertility and spermiogenesis in mice, and its major function is to transport cargo proteins for sperm flagella formation,” said lead researcher Zhibing Zhang, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology in the VCU School of Medicine. “Our study also uncovered a novel genetic factor for male infertility.”

In humans, accounts for 40-50 percent of infertility, and it affects approximately 7 percent of all men. Many different medical conditions and other factors can contribute to fertility problems, but the most common issues that lead to infertility in men are problems that affect how the testicles work. Many of the etiologies are unknown, but this accounts for about 50 percent of patients. Genetic factors are the major issues.

There are two kinds of cilia, and primary cilia. Motile cilia are present in sperm, epithelial cells of trachea and brain ventricles; the major function of motile cilia is for motility. Primary cilia are present in almost all the mammalian cells; t

Published by connie dello buono

Health educator, author and enterpreneur motherhealth@gmail.com or conniedbuono@gmail.com ; cell 408-854-1883 Helping families in the bay area by providing compassionate and live-in caregivers for homebound bay area seniors. Blogs at www.clubalthea.com Currently writing a self help and self cure ebook to help transform others in their journey to wellness, Healing within, transform inside and out. This is a compilation of topics Connie answered at quora.com and posts in this site.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from Affordable in home care | starts at $28 per hr

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading