The nondeletion genotype of the GSTT1 gene was found to be strongly associated with the increased risk of idiopathic male infertility and asthenozoospermia.
Mutation screening of the DNAH1 gene was performed on 87 cases of asthenozoospermia with targeted high-throughput sequencing technology; another 200 nonobstructive azoospermia cases were further analyzed to investigate the prevalence of DNAH1 variations.
Nevertheless, causal genetic variants in a conserved axonemal component have been found in cases of isolated asthenozoospermia: 30% of men with multiple morphological anomalies of sperm flagella (MMAF) carry bi-allelic mutations in DNAH1, encoding one of the seven inner-arm dynein heavy chains of the 9 + 2 axoneme.
Good ICSI results were obtained for both MMAF groups (DNAH1 mutated and nonmutated), suggesting that patients presenting with asthenozoospermia due to flagellar defects have a good ICSI prognosis irrespective of their genotype.
Mutations in DNAH1, an axonemal inner dynein arm heavy chain gene, have been shown to be responsible for male infertility due to a characteristic form of asthenozoospermia called MMAF, defined by the presence in the ejaculate of spermatozoa with a mosaic of flagellar abnormalities including absent, coiled, bent, angulated, irregular and short flagella.
ADCY10 is a susceptibility gene for dominant absorptive hypercalciuria (OMIM#143870); however, no ADCY10 variations have been confirmed to cause human asthenozoospermia to date.
To the best of our knowledge, the involvement of CATSPER2 in asthenoteratozoospermia is the first description of a human autosomal gene defect associated with nonsyndromic male infertility.