Frontiers in Reproductive Health (Nov 2022)

Tissue specific age acceleration patterns in the sperm of oligozoospermic men

  • Kelaney Stalker,
  • Chad Pollard,
  • Kenneth Aston,
  • Tim Jenkins,
  • Tim Jenkins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/frph.2022.1043904
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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To determine if disease can modify aging patterns in an affected tissue without altering the aging patterns of other tissues, blood and semen of individuals with oligozoospermia (n = 10) were compared to the blood and semen of individuals with normozoospermia (n = 24). DNA methylation data was obtained via Illumina's 850 K array. The Horvath and Jenkins age calculators were then utilized to predict the epigenetic age of blood and sperm. Epigenetic age of sperm was approximated using germ-line age differential (GLAD) values. Using nonpaired t-tests, it was found that sperm of oligozoospermic men (mean GLAD score of 0.078) were predicted to be significantly older than the sperm of normozoospermic men (mean GLAD score of −0.017), returning a p-value of 0.03. However, there was not a significant epigenetic age difference between the blood of those with oligozoospermia (mean GLAD equivalent score of −0.027) and normozoospermia (mean GLAD equivalent score of 0.048), producing a p-value of 0.20. These results lead to the conclusion that tissue specific aging is occurring in sperm of oligozoospermic individuals but not in unaffected somatic tissues (in this case, blood).

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