| Literature DB >> 35741761 |
Hao-Qi Wang1, Tian Wang1, Fei Gao1, Wen-Zhi Ren1.
Abstract
As the basis of animal reproductive activity, normal spermatogenesis directly determines the efficiency of livestock production. An in-depth understanding of spermatogenesis will greatly facilitate animal breeding efforts and male infertility treatment. With the continuous development and application of gene editing technologies, they have become valuable tools to study the mechanism of spermatogenesis. Gene editing technologies have provided us with a better understanding of the functions and potential mechanisms of action of factors that regulate spermatogenesis. This review summarizes the applications of gene editing technologies, especially CRISPR/Cas9, in deepening our understanding of the function of spermatogenesis-related genes and disease treatment. The problems of gene editing technologies in the field of spermatogenesis research are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: animal breeding; animal models; gene editing; male infertility; spermatogenesis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35741761 PMCID: PMC9223233 DOI: 10.3390/genes13061000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.141
Figure 1The mechanism of CRISPR/Cas9 mediated genome engineering.
Figure 2Schematic summary of CRISPR/Cas systems used for genome editing.
Genes related to spermatogenesis unearthed by gene editing technology.
| Gene | Species | Techniques Used for Function Analysis | Fertility | Phenotype/Clinical Symptoms | References |
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| KO 1 | Male infertility | Abnormal sperm morphology and reduced motility | [ |
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| KO | - | Dysregulation of germ cell development and the over-proliferation of spermatogonia | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Multiple morphological abnormalities of the flagella | [ |
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| KO | Fertile | Oligospermia and a disorganized ES junction | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Impaired sperm viability and abnormal mitochondrial structure of sperm cells | [ |
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| KO | Significantly impaired fertility | Defective sperm flagellum differentiation and abnormal sperm tail structure | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Shortened flagella | [ |
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| KO | - | No differences in development, fertility, appearance, testis weight, or sperm counts. Nuclear base bending abnormality | [ |
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| KO | Significantly impaired fertility | Low sperm count, impaired sperm motility and high percentage of morphologically abnormal sperm | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Impaired haploid differentiation and absence of elongated spermatozoa in the epididymal tail | [ |
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| KO | Significantly impaired fertility | Decreased sperm count, decreased epididymal sperm motility, increased percentage of abnormal backward bending of sperm head and bending of sperm mid-section | [ |
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| KI 2/KO | - | A transgenerational loss of sperm-based fertility in hermaphrodites | [ |
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| KO | - | Exhibits female secondary sexual characteristics, severe deficiency of androgens and cortisol, impaired spermatogenesis and characteristic reproductive behavior, disturbed arrangement of spermatogenic tubules, and abnormal differentiation of spermatogonia. | [ |
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| cKO 3(Cre-loxP) | - | Spermatogonia developed and became arrested at the round spermatid stage | [ |
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| KO | No clear phenotype for single knockout, but 23/26 or 23/26/42 combined knockout is infertile. | Impaired sperm motility, the sperm showed precocious capacitation and increased spontaneous acrosome reaction. | [ |
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| KO | - | Severe testicular developmental defects and gradual loss of all Vasa-positive germ cells | [ |
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| KO | - | Fewer spermatocytes | [ |
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| KO | - | Asthenozoospermia, abnormal sperm flagellar morphology and low sperm activity. | [ |
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| KO (NA) 9 | Male infertility | The NDL facing the acrosome, the acro-plaxome, caudal descent and acrosome spreading are defective. | [ |
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| KO (SSCs) 7 | - | Proliferation and stem cell activity are impaired. | [ |
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| KO | Significantly impaired fertility | Abnormal spermiation, abnormal head morphology, and reduced progressive sperm motility. | [ |
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| KO (spermatogonia) | - | Chromosome instability and G2/M arrest | [ |
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| Point mutation | - | Delayed spermatogenesis | [ |
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| KD 4 | - | The distribution of germ cells was disordered and apoptosis of spermatogenic cells increased significantly. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Reduced sperm count, increased sperm head size, and abnormal tail architecture | [ |
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| Biallelic mutations (ESCs) | - | Hydin-disrupted sperm obtained from the chimeric mice possessed short tails and were immotile, but it can produce viable pups. | [ |
| KO (NA) | - | Die within 3 weeks before sexual maturation due to hydrocephaly. | [ | ||
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| KO | Male infertility | The proliferation and differentiation of spermatogonia are severely inhibited at the beginning of meiosis, and semen volume and sperm count are drastically reduced. | [ |
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| KO | Normal fertility | There was no significant effect on the morphological appearance of the testes but epididymal sperm maturation defects. | [ |
| cKI 5 | Normal fertility | - | [ | ||
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| KO | Fertile, lower fertilization rate | Serum THs (T3 and T4) level were significantly increased, growth delay along with thyroid dysfunction, testis maldevelopment and impaired spermiogenesis. | [ |
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| Y68 point mutation | Male infertility | The sperm count is significantly reduced, and a few developed sperm fail to move and exhibit a variety of abnormalities. | [ |
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| KO (NA) | Male infertility | Fragmentation of acrosomes in the early stages of spermiogenesis, round-headed sperm, reduced sperm count, and severely impaired sperm motility. | [ |
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| Point mutation | Male infertility | Defects in the development of eupyrene sperm bundles | [ |
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| KO/DKO 6 | Male infertility | Impaired migration from the uterus to the oviduct and impaired ability to bind the zona pellucida (ZP) of oocytes | [ |
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| KO | Significantly impaired fertility | Hypogonadism, sperm deformation and a significant decrease in sperm motility. | [ |
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| KO | Male mice are sterile and females are capable of reproduction. | Smaller testes, defective meiosis, and reduced number of germ cells. | [ |
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| KO | Significantly impaired fertility | Abnormal spermiogenesis, reduction of sperm motility | [ |
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| cKO (Cre-loxP) | Male infertility | Stagnant germ cell development, abnormal acrosome and axon development and complete cessation of spermatogenesis. | [ | |
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| 851G→A/R284Q point mutation | Fertile | - | [ |
| 781-bp deletion | Male infertility | Spermio-genic arrest, with impaired differentiation of round spermatids into the mature sperm. | [ | ||
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| KO | Normal fertility with reduced in vitro fertility | Acrosome defects and excessive lipid droplet residues in the cytoplasm. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Separation of sperm head from tail | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Globozoospermia, loss of sperm motility and abnormal localization of Golgi at steps eight and nine of spermatid development. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Reduced sperm counts and a globozoospermia-like phenotype. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Sperm cells and spermatozoa of Tcfl5+/- mice (infertility) have been abnormal. | [ |
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| KO (spermatogonia, CRISPR/Cas9, Tet-on) 8 | - | Spermatogonia proliferation and cell cycle are inhibited. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Normal spermatogenesis and sperm morphology, but ejaculated spermatozoa failed to migrate from the uterus to the oviduct. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Disordered mitochondrial sheath formation and reduced sperm motility. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Reduced sperm count and abnormal morphology. | [ |
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| Frameshift mutation | Male infertility (78%) | The motility and progressive motility of spermatozoa were significantly reduced. Morphological abnormalities of sperm. The structural abnormalities of the connecting piece during spermiogenesis and multiple structural defects of the flagella. | [ |
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| KO (spermatogonia) | - | Cell proliferation, cell adhesion and cell spread were inhibited. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Post-meiotic germ cell arrest at the round spermatid stage in the seminiferous tubules of the testis. | [ |
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| KO | Normal fertility | - | [ |
| DKO | Infertility | Abnormal sperm morphology, fertilization failure and early embryo development failure. | |||
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| KO | Male infertility | Abnormal spindle assembly at mid-meiotic division. | [ |
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| KO | Male infertility | Smaller testes and epididymis, stagnation of spermatogenesis at the spermatocyte stage, absence of spermatozoa in the epididymis, and apoptosis of testicular cells. | [ |
1 KO: CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout; 2 KI: CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knock-in; 3 cKO: CRISPR/Cas9-mediated conditional knockout; 4 KD: CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockdown; 5 cKI: CRISPR/Cas9-mediated conditional knock-in; 6 DKO: CRISPR/Cas9-mediated double knockout; 7 The corresponding cells on which gene editing was performed are indicated in parentheses; 8 The corresponding cells on which gene editing was performed are indicated in parentheses; 9 NA: The technique of mediated gene knockout is unknown or not mentioned in the original article.