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PMID 16574598
Gene Name DAZ1
Condition Infertility
Association The study suggests use of PCR-DGGE method for detection of DAZ gene deletion which could be useful as a first step in the diagnosis workup of nonobstructive azoospermia and severe oligozoospermia
Mutation Microdeletions in Yq11
Population size 34
Population details 34 (16 oligozoospermic and 18 azoospermic men) 
Sex Male
Infertility type Male infertility
Other associated phenotypes Idiopathic Azoospermia, severe Oligozoospermia


Evaluation of DAZ microdeletions in 34 infertile men

Abdelmoula NB, Sallemi A, Chakroun N, Keskes L, Amouri A, Rebai T.

Microdeletions in Yq11 are a common molecular cause of spermatogenic failure in men and are recurrently detected in about 10-15% of idiopathic azoospermia and severe oligozoospermia. Screening for AZF microdeletions is often performed by multiplex PCR. AZFc deletions, involving the DAZ gene, form the majority of these deletions. The aim of this study was to evaluate in a group of 34 Tunisian infertile patients (16 oligozoospermic and 18 azoospermic men) the prevalence of DAZ microdeletions using a rapid molecular strategy: the PCR-DGGE method based on the high degree of homology between the DAZ gene and its autosomally equivalent DAZLA gene. DAZ microdeletions were detected in 8.8% of patients. The three deleted patients have a 46, XY karyotype. Two of them were azoospermic and the other had an extreme oligo-asthenoteratozoospermia with a predominant abnormality: small round head spermatozoa (Y46). Our findings suggest that PCR-DGGE method, for detection of DAZ gene deletion, could be particularly useful as a first step in the diagnosis workup of nonobstructive azoospermia and severe oligozoospermia for three reasons. First, it is a simple and fast system; second, DAZ microdeletions are the most common Y deletions; and third, partial DAZ microdeletions and mosaicism may be recognized by PCR-DGGE while only deletions removing the whole DAZ gene cluster can be detected by STS-PCR [211]. Nevertheless, this procedure has limitations because other deletions of AZFa and AZFb may go undetected. Therefore, molecular investigation by multiplex PCR must be conducted in a second step according to European guidelines for the molecular diagnosis of Y chromosome microdeletions, particularly before ICSI procedures. FAU - Abdelmoula, N Bouayed AU - Abdelmoula NB AD - Laboratory of Histology, Faculty of Medicine of Sfax, Tunisia. nouha_abdelmoulabouayed@yahoo.fr FAU - Sallemi, A AU - Sallemi A FAU - Chakroun, N AU - Chakroun N FAU - Keskes, L AU - Keskes L FAU - Amouri, A AU - Amouri A