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PMID 10581029
Gene Name USP9Y
Condition Azoospermic
Association USP9Y mutationmay can cause spermatogenic failure

PMID 10581029
Gene Name USP9Y
Condition Infertile
Association Screening of the two genes in 576 infertile and 96 fertile men revealed several sequence variants, most of which appear to be heritable and of little functional consequence but one de novo mutation in USP9Y: a 4-bp deletion in a splice-donor site, causing
PMID 10581029
Gene Name USP9Y
Condition Azoospermia, Spernmatogenic failure
Association Associated
Mutation USP9Y: a 4-bp deletion in a splice-donor site, causing an exon to be skipped and protein truncation
Population size 672
Population details 672 (576 infertile men, 96 fertile men)
Sex Male
Infertility type Male infertility
Associated genes USP9Y
Other associated phenotypes Azoospermia, Spernmatogenic failure


An azoospermic man with a de novo point mutation in the Y-chromosomal gene USP9Y

Sun C, Skaletsky H, Birren B, Devon K, Tang Z, Silber S, Oates R, Page DC.

In humans, deletion of any one of three Y-chromosomal regions- AZFa, AZFb or AZFc-disrupts spermatogenesis, causing infertility in otherwise healthy men. Although candidate genes have been identified in all three regions, no case of spermatogenic failure has been traced to a point mutation in a Y-linked gene, or to a deletion of a single Y-linked gene. We sequenced the AZFa region of the Y chromosome and identified two functional genes previously described: USP9Y (also known as DFFRY) and DBY (refs 7,8). Screening of the two genes in 576 infertile and 96 fertile men revealed several sequence variants, most of which appear to be heritable and of little functional consequence. We found one de novo mutation in USP9Y: a 4-bp deletion in a splice-donor site, causing an exon to be skipped and protein truncation. This mutation was present in a man with nonobstructive azoospermia (that is, no sperm was detected in semen), but absent in his fertile brother, suggesting that the USP9Y mutation caused spermatogenic failure. We also identified a single-gene deletion associated with spermatogenic failure, again involving USP9Y, by re-analysing a published study. FAU - Sun, C AU - Sun C AD - Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Whitehead Institute, and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. FAU - Skaletsky, H AU - Skaletsky H FAU - Birren, B AU - Birren B FAU - Devon, K AU - Devon K FAU - Tang, Z AU - Tang Z FAU - Silber, S AU - Silber S FAU - Oates, R AU - Oates R