Annals of Saudi Medicine (Jul 2020)

Cystic fibrosis gene mutations and polymorphisms in Saudi men with infertility

  • Talal AlMaghamsi,
  • Naeem Iqbal,
  • Nabil Abdullrahman Al-Esaei,
  • Muhsina Mohammed,
  • Kamel Zein Eddin,
  • Fatima Ghurab,
  • Nabil Moghrabi,
  • Emily Heaphy,
  • Islam Junaid

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5144/0256-4947.2020.321
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40, no. 4
pp. 321 – 329

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: Some mutations of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) gene may impair spermatogenesis or cause a congenital absence of the vas deferens that manifests as isolated male infertility. OBJECTIVE: Assess the frequency and analyze the spectrum of CFTR gene variations in Saudi men with primary infertility. DESIGN: Prospective, cross-sectional. SETTING: Tertiary care specialist hospital in Jeddah. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood samples of Saudi men who presented with primary infertility to the outpatient andrology clinic with either azoospermia or oligoasthenoteratozoospermia. Polymerase chain reaction and direct sequencing were used to identify all variants of the CFTR gene. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Proportion of the patients with a mutant CFTR gene and the spectrum of CFTR gene variations. SAMPLE SIZE: 50 infertile Saudi men. RESULTS: This study identified 10 CFTR gene variants in 7 (14%) subjects (100 chromosomes). The detected variants and polymorphisms were: c.1408G>A, c.4389G>A, c.2562T>G, c.869+11C>T, c.2909-92G>A, c.3469-65C>A, c.1210-6delT, c.1210-6T>A, c.2988+1G>A, and c.1210-13GT>TG. CONCLUSION: We demonstrated that 14% of the study subjects had one or more CFTR mutations and these were compounded in most of the affected patients. The spectrum of CFTR gene mutations in these subjects was similar to the mutations reported in other studies throughout the world. LIMITATIONS: Small sample size and the lack of a control group. CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: None.