| Literature DB >> 33914208 |
Yves Ménézo1,2, Pasquale Patrizio3, Silvia Alvarez4, Edouard Amar5, Michel Brack6, Charles Brami5, Jacques Chouteau7, Arthur Clement8, Patrice Clement8, Marc Cohen9, Dominique Cornet4, Brian Dale10,11, Guiseppe D' Amato12, Laetitia Jacquesson-Fournols4, Pierre Mares13, Paul Neveux14, Jean Clement Sage15, Edouard Servy16, To Minh Huong15, Geraldine Viot4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: MTHFR, one of the major enzymes in the folate cycle, is known to acquire single-nucleotide polymorphisms that significantly reduce its activity, resulting in an increase in circulating homocysteine. Methylation processes are of crucial importance in gametogenesis, involved in the regulation of imprinting and epigenetic tags on DNA and histones. We have retrospectively assessed the prevalence of MTHFR SNPs in a population consulting for infertility according to gender and studied the impact of the mutations on circulating homocysteine levels.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; Fertility; Gametes; Gender prevalence; Homocysteine; MTHFR SNPs; Recurrent miscarriages
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33914208 PMCID: PMC8490548 DOI: 10.1007/s10815-021-02200-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Assist Reprod Genet ISSN: 1058-0468 Impact factor: 3.412
Fig. 1Homocysteine (Hcy) generation. SAH (S-adenosyl homocysteine) is formed after target methylation with release of a methyl group via SAM (S-adenosyl methionine). Free Hcy is then released from SAH by SAH hydrolase
Fig. 2The one-carbon (1-CC) and folate cycles. A narrow gap at the level of MTHFR results in accumulation of unmetabolized folic acid, with feedback inhibition by excess substrate (Michelis and Menten law); the folate cycle may be reversed. A shortage of vitamin B12 (e.g., malabsorption) inactivates methionine synthase, with impairment of methionine synthase activity and accumulation of homocysteine. Mutations in the CBS pathway may also induces Hcy accumulation
Distribution of the MTHFR 677CT and 1298AC SNPS. The sex difference in the distribution is not significant (p = 0.056). * patients carrying 3 mutations. WT, wild type
| Mutation type | Women (%) | Men (%) | Total (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 677CC/1298AA (WT) | 259(16.3) | 202(14.6) | 461(15.3) |
| 677TT/1298AA | 181(11.4) | 158(11.4) | 339(11.4) |
| 677CC/1298CC | 148(9.3) | 111(8.) | 259(8.7) |
| 677CT/1298AC | 308(19.4) | 326(23.6) | 634(21.3) |
| 677CT/1298AA | 381(24) | 311(22.5) | 692(23.3) |
| 677CC/1298AC | 307(19.3) | 265(19.2) | 572(19.3) |
| 3 allele mutations* | 4 (0.0025) | 9(0.007) | 13(0. 4) |
Fig. 3Serum Hcy according to gender (M, men; W, women)
Fig. 4Patients having a blood Hcy > 15 μmoles/L according to the mutational status