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Telomere aberrations, including telomere loss, doublets, and extreme shortening, are increased in patients with infertility

Radhia M’kacher, Bruno Colicchio, Valentine Marquet, Claire Borie, Wala Najar, William M. Hempel, Leonhard Heidingsfelder, Noufϊssa Oudrhiri, Mustafa Al Jawhari, Nadège Wilhelm-Murer, Marguerite Miguet, Alain Dieterlen, Georges Deschênes, Anne‐Claude Tabet, Steffen Junker

Fertility and Sterility · 2020 · ▲ 24 citations

Abstract

ObjectiveTo test the hypothesis that telomere(definition) shortening and/or loss are risk factors for infertility.DesignRetrospective analysis of the telomere status in patients with infertility using conventional cytogenetic data collected prospectively.SettingAcademic centers.Patient(s)Cytogenetic slides with cultured peripheral lymphocytes from 50 patients undergoing fertility treatment and 150 healthy donors, including 100 donors matched for age.Intervention(s)Cytogenetic slides were used to detect chromosomal and telomere aberrations.Main Outcome Measure(s)Telomere length and telomere aberrations were analyzed after telomere and centromere staining.Result(s)The mean telomere length of patients consulting for infertility was significantly less than that of healthy donors of similar age. Moreover, patients with infertility showed significantly more extreme telomere loss and telomere doublet formation than healthy controls. Telomere shortening and/or telomere aberrations were more pronounced in patients with structural chromosomal aberrations. Dicentric chromosomes were identified in 6/13 patients, with constitutional chromosomal aberrations leading to chromosomal instability that correlated with chromosomal end-to-end fusions.Conclusion(s)Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of analyzing telomere aberrations in addition to chromosomal aberrations, using cytogenetic slides. Telomere attrition and/or dysfunction represent the main common cytogenetic characteristic of patients with infertility, leading to potential implications for fertility assessment. Pending further studies, these techniques that correlate the outcome of assisted reproduction and telomere integrity status may represent a novel and useful diagnostic and/or prognostic tool for medical care in this field. To test the hypothesis that telomere shortening and/or loss are risk factors for infertility. Retrospective analysis of the telomere status in patients with infertility using conventional cytogenetic data collected prospectively. Academic centers. Cytogenetic slides with cultured peripheral lymphocytes from 50 patients undergoing fertility treatment and 150 healthy donors, including 100 donors matched for age. Cytogenetic slides were used to detect chromosomal and telomere aberrations. Telomere length and telomere aberrations were analyzed after telomere and centromere staining. The mean telomere length of patients consulting for infertility was significantly less than that of healthy donors of similar age. Moreover, patients with infertility showed significantly more extreme telomere loss and telomere doublet formation than healthy controls. Telomere shortening and/or telomere aberrations were more pronounced in patients with structural chromosomal aberrations. Dicentric chromosomes were identified in 6/13 patients, with constitutional chromosomal aberrations leading to chromosomal instability that correlated with chromosomal end-to-end fusions. Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of analyzing telomere aberrations in addition to chromosomal aberrations, using cytogenetic slides. Telomere attrition and/or dysfunction represent the main common cytogenetic characteristic of patients with infertility, leading to potential implications for fertility assessment. Pending further studies, these techniques that correlate the outcome of assisted reproduction and telomere integrity status may represent a novel and useful diagnostic and/or prognostic tool for medical care in this field.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1016/j.fertnstert.2020.07.005
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2026-06-02 MST

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APA
M’kacher, R., Colicchio, B., Marquet, V., Borie, C., Najar, W., Hempel, W.M., Heidingsfelder, L., Oudrhiri, N., Jawhari, M.A., Wilhelm-Murer, N., Miguet, M., Dieterlen, A., Deschênes, G., Tabet, A., Junker, S., Grynberg, M., Fenech, M., Bennaceur‐Griscelli, A., Voisin, P., &amp; Carde, P. (2020). Telomere aberrations, including telomere loss, doublets, and extreme shortening, are increased in patients with infertility. <em>Fertility and Sterility</em>. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2020.07.005
Vancouver
M’kacher R, Colicchio B, Marquet V, Borie C, Najar W, Hempel WM, et al. Telomere aberrations, including telomere loss, doublets, and extreme shortening, are increased in patients with infertility. Fertility and Sterility. 2020. doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2020.07.005.
BibTeX
@article{radhia2020Telome, title = {Telomere aberrations, including telomere loss, doublets, and extreme shortening, are increased in patients with infertility}, author = {Radhia M’kacher and Bruno Colicchio and Valentine Marquet and Claire Borie and Wala Najar and William M. Hempel and Leonhard Heidingsfelder and Noufϊssa Oudrhiri and Mustafa Al Jawhari and Nadège Wilhelm-Murer and Marguerite Miguet and Alain Dieterlen and Georges Deschênes and Anne‐Claude Tabet and Steffen Junker and Michaël Grynberg and Michael Fenech and Annelise Bennaceur‐Griscelli and Philippe Voisin and Patrice Carde and Éric Jeandidier and Catherine Yardin}, journal = {Fertility and Sterility}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1016/j.fertnstert.2020.07.005}, }

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