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Obesity-Induced Infertility in Male Mice Is Associated With Disruption of Crisp4 Expression and Sperm Fertilization Capacity.

Citation
Borges, B. C., et al. “Obesity-Induced Infertility In Male Mice Is Associated With Disruption Of Crisp4 Expression And Sperm Fertilization Capacity.”. Endocrinology, pp. 2930-2943.
Center University of Michigan
Author Beatriz C Borges, David Garcia-Galiano, Sanseray da Silveira Cruz-Machado, Xingfa Han, Galina B Gavrilina, Thomas L Saunders, Richard J Auchus, Saher S Hammoud, Gary D Smith, Carol F Elias
Abstract

Approximately 15% of human couples of reproductive age have impaired fertility, and the male component accounts for about half of these cases. The etiology is usually unknown, but high correlation with the increase in obesity rates is documented. In this study, we show that diet-induced and genetically obese mice display copulatory behavior comparable to controls, but the number of females impregnated by obese males is remarkably low. Screening for changes in gene expression in the male reproductive tract showed decreased Crisp4 expression in testis and epididymis of obese mice. Lack of CRISP4 in the luminal membrane of epididymal cells indicated inadequate secretion. Consistent with CRISP4 action in acrosome reaction, sperm from mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD) had decreased fertilization capacity. CRISP4 treatment of sperm from HFD mice prior to in vitro fertilization improved fertilization rate. In leptin-deficient obese and infertile mice, leptin's effect to restore CRISP4 expression and function required gonadal hormones. Our findings indicate that the obesity-induced decline in sperm motility and fertilization capacity results in part from the disruption of epididymal CRISP4 expression and secretion.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Endocrinology
Volume
158
Issue
9
Number of Pages
2930-2943
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1945-7170
DOI
10.1210/en.2017-00295
Alternate Journal
Endocrinology
PMID
28911169
PMCID
PMC5659670
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