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Citations to this article

Human fertilization in vivo and in vitro requires the CatSper channel to initiate sperm hyperactivation
Samuel Young, … , Christoph Brenker, Timo Strünker
Samuel Young, … , Christoph Brenker, Timo Strünker
Published January 2, 2024
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2024;134(1):e173564. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI173564.
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Research Article Cell biology Reproductive biology Article has an altmetric score of 93

Human fertilization in vivo and in vitro requires the CatSper channel to initiate sperm hyperactivation

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Abstract

The infertility of many couples rests on an enigmatic dysfunction of the man’s sperm. To gain insight into the underlying pathomechanisms, we assessed the function of the sperm-specific multisubunit CatSper-channel complex in the sperm of almost 2,300 men undergoing a fertility workup, using a simple motility-based test. We identified a group of men with normal semen parameters but defective CatSper function. These men or couples failed to conceive naturally and upon medically assisted reproduction via intrauterine insemination and in vitro fertilization. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) was, ultimately, required to conceive a child. We revealed that the defective CatSper function was caused by variations in CATSPER genes. Moreover, we unveiled that CatSper-deficient human sperm were unable to undergo hyperactive motility and, therefore, failed to penetrate the egg coat. Thus, our study provides the experimental evidence that sperm hyperactivation is required for human fertilization, explaining the infertility of CatSper-deficient men and the need of ICSI for medically assisted reproduction. Finally, our study also revealed that defective CatSper function and ensuing failure to hyperactivate represents the most common cause of unexplained male infertility known thus far and that this sperm channelopathy can readily be diagnosed, enabling future evidence-based treatment of affected couples.

Authors

Samuel Young, Christian Schiffer, Alice Wagner, Jannika Patz, Anton Potapenko, Leonie Herrmann, Verena Nordhoff, Tim Pock, Claudia Krallmann, Birgit Stallmeyer, Albrecht Röpke, Michelina Kierzek, Cristina Biagioni, Tao Wang, Lars Haalck, Dirk Deuster, Jan N. Hansen, Dagmar Wachten, Benjamin Risse, Hermann M. Behre, Stefan Schlatt, Sabine Kliesch, Frank Tüttelmann, Christoph Brenker, Timo Strünker

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Total citations by year

Year: 2025 2024 Total
Citations: 1 7 8
Citation information
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Citations to this article (8)

Title and authors Publication Year
The major phytocannabinoids, delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD), affect the function of CatSper calcium channels in human sperm
Wehrli L, Altevogt H, Brenker C, Zufferey F, Rossier MF, Strünker T, Nef S, Rahban R
Human Reproduction (Oxford, England) 2025
Ca2+ homeostasis and male fertility: a target for a new male contraceptive system
Lee KH, Hwang JY
Animal Cells and Systems 2024
10th European Calcium Society symposium: The Ca2+-signaling toolkit in cell function, health and disease.
Speelman-Rooms F, Vanmunster M, Coughlan A, Hinrichs M, Pontisso I, Barbeau S, Parpaite T, Bultynck G, Brohus M
Biology Open 2024
Genetics of female and male infertility
Friedrich C, Tüttelmann F
Medizinische Genetik 2024
The sperm-specific K+ channel Slo3 is inhibited by albumin and steroids contained in reproductive fluids
Lorenz J, Eisenhardt C, Mittermair T, Kulle AE, Holterhus PM, Fobker M, Boenigk W, Nordhoff V, Behre HM, Strünker T, Brenker C
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology 2024
Molecular mechanisms of mammalian sperm capacitation, and its regulation by sodium‐dependent secondary active transporters
Takei GL
Reproductive Medicine and Biology 2024
Extracellular domains of CATSPERε are essential for CatSper assembly during development and activity modulation in sperm capacitation
Hwang JY, Wang H, Clouser G, Oh JN, Finnegan SF, Skakkebaek NE, Chung JJ
bioRxiv 2024
Novel genes of the male reproductive system: potential roles in male reproduction and as non-hormonal male contraceptive targets
Garcia TX, Matzuk MM
Molecular reproduction and development 2024

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Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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