| Literature DB >> 31412318 |
Aleksandra Rosiak-Gill1,2, Kamil Gill1, Joanna Jakubik1, Monika Fraczek3, Lukasz Patorski1,4, Dariusz Gaczarzewicz5, Rafał Kurzawa6,2, Maciej Kurpisz3, Malgorzata Piasecka1.
Abstract
Abnormal standard semen characteristics and reduced sperm chromatin maturity can appear with increasing male age. However, the influence of paternal age on semen parameters is still controversial. Therefore, this study was designed to estimate the influence of paternal age not only on conventional semen characteristics but also on sperm DNA integrity. This research was carried out on ejaculated sperm cells obtained from men (n = 1124) aged ≥40 y and <40 y. Our data revealed a decreased semen volume and an increased percentage of DFI (sperm DNA fragmentation index) in older men compared to younger men in the entire study cohort, in men with normozoospermia and in men with abnormal semen parameters. Moreover, there was a higher incidence of sperm DNA damage (>10% DFI, low fertility potential) in the groups of men aged ≥40 y than in the groups of men aged <40 y. Older men had over twice the odds ratio for high sperm DNA damage as younger men. Our findings suggest a detrimental effect of advanced paternal age on sperm chromatin integrity. The data show that the evaluation of sperm DNA has greater clinical utility than standard semen analysis in case of male fertility potential assessment.Entities:
Keywords: TUNEL; male fertility; paternal age; sperm DNA integrity; standard semen characteristic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31412318 PMCID: PMC6710060 DOI: 10.18632/aging.102120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.682
Figure 1Scheme of suggested age-related changes affecting the male reproductive system and their consequences for male fertility and offspring health. Details in the text. According to Rosiak et al. [6, 9], modified.
Descriptive statistics and comparisons of standard semen parameters and DFI between men aged <40 y and ≥40 y.
| 902 | 222 | 0.00001 | |
| 902 | 222 | 0.00012 | |
| 902 | 222 | 0.40039 | |
| 902 | 222 | 0.2374 | |
| 902 | 222 | 0.03200 | |
| 845 | 218 | 0.11902 | |
| 902 | 222 | 0.40505 | |
| 902 | 222 | 0.00013 | |
| 902 | 222 | 0.61195 | |
| 897 | 220 | 0.95651 | |
| 631 | 190 | 0.47225 | |
| 862 | 216 | 0.21214 | |
| 869 | 216 | 0.27913 | |
| 248 | 88 | 0.00001 |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects, SD – standard deviation, TZI – teratozoospermia index, p – significance of differences between compared groups, Mann–Whitney U test
Descriptive statistics and comparisons of standard semen parameters and DFI between men aged <40 y and ≥40 y with normozoospermia.
| 367 | 81 | 0.00001 | |
| 367 | 81 | 0.00219 | |
| 367 | 81 | 0.24677 | |
| 367 | 81 | 0.56813 | |
| 367 | 81 | 0.10451 | |
| 350 | 79 | 0.03818 | |
| 367 | 81 | 0.02615 | |
| 367 | 81 | 0.11685 | |
| 367 | 81 | 0.23924 | |
| 366 | 81 | 0.01771 | |
| 252 | 73 | 0.22170 | |
| 351 | 79 | 0.97768 | |
| 354 | 79 | 0.81045 | |
| 116 | 44 | 0.00518 |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects, SD – standard deviation, TZI – teratozoospermia index, p – significance of differences between compared groups, Mann–Whitney U test
Descriptive statistics and comparisons of standard semen parameters and DFI between men aged <40 y and ≥40 y with abnormal semen parameters.
| 535 | 141 | 0.00001 | |
| 535 | 141 | 0.01952 | |
| 535 | 141 | 0.55474 | |
| 535 | 141 | 0.44229 | |
| 535 | 141 | 0.24004 | |
| 495 | 139 | 0.16066 | |
| 535 | 141 | 0.59229 | |
| 535 | 141 | 0.00033 | |
| 535 | 141 | 0.21761 | |
| 531 | 139 | 0.23521 | |
| 379 | 117 | 0.84956 | |
| 511 | 137 | 0.10633 | |
| 515 | 137 | 0.21906 | |
| 132 | 44 | 0.00120 |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects, SD – standard deviation, TZI – teratozoospermia index, p – significance of differences between compared groups, Mann–Whitney U test
Prevalence of DFI in the group of men aged ≥40 y and <40 y in the entire cohort.
| 115(46.37) | 133(53.63) | |
| 24(27.27)* | 64(72.73)* | |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects. *Significant difference between compared groups at p = 0.0018; chi-squared test
Prevalence of DFI in the group of men aged ≥40 y and <40 y with abnormal standard semen parameters.
| 63(47.73) | 69(52.27) | |
| 13(29.54)* | 31(70.46)* | |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects. *Significant difference between compared groups at p = 0.0355; chi-squared test.
Odds ratio (OR) for DFI in the group of men aged ≥40 y compared to men <40 y in the entire cohort.
| 115(46.37) | 24(27.27) | 0.4337* (0.2549 to 0.7378) | |
| DFI >10% | 133(53.63) | 64(72.73) | 2.3058* (1.3553–3.9228) |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects. *Statistical significance at p = 0.0021; 95% CI – 95% confidential interval
Odds ratio (OR) for DFI in the group of men aged ≥40 y compared to men <40 y with abnormal standard semen parameters.
| 63(47.73) | 13(29.54) | 0.4593* (0.2209–0.9551) | |
| DFI >10% | 69(52.27) | 31(70.46) | 2.1773* (1.0470–4.5278) |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects. *statistical significance at p = 0.0373; 95% CI – 95% confidential interval
Figure 2Representative histograms obtained for the positive (with DNase I) and negative (without TdT) controls and strategy applied in the TUNEL/PI flow cytometry analysis. In the fluorescence histograms, markers (M1, M2, M3) are set to exclude necrotic sperm cells and calculate the percentage of TUNEL-positive sperm cells (with fragmented DNA) read from the M2 marker. FL3 – red fluorescence channel for PI-stained cells, FL1 – green fluorescence channel for FITC-streptavidin-biotin-dNTP-labelled cells, TdT – terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, PI – propidium iodide, TdT – terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, TUNEL – terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labelling.
Figure 3Representative histograms obtained for test samples. The calculation of TUNEL-positive sperm cells (with fragmented DNA) based on data analysis presented in Figure 1. FL3 – red fluorescence channel for PI-stained cells, FL3 – red fluorescence channel for PI-stained cells, FL1 – green fluorescence channel for FITC-streptavidin-biotin-dNTP-labelled cells, TUNEL – terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labelling, PI – propidium iodide.
Prevalence of DFI in the group of men aged ≥40 y and <40 y with normal standard semen parameters.
| 52(44.83) | 64(55.17) | |
| 11(25.00)* | 33(75.00)* | |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects. *Significant difference between compared groups at p = 0.0223; chi-squared test
Odds ratio (OR) for DFI in the group of men aged ≥ 40 y compared to men <40 y with normal standard semen parameters.
| 52(44.83) | 11(25.00) | 0.4103* (0.1891–0.8899) | |
| 64(55.17) | 33(75.00) | 2.4375* (1.1237–5.2871) |
DFI – sperm DNA fragmentation index, n – number of subjects.*statistical significance at p = 0.0241; 95% CI – 95% confidential interval