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Featured researches published by Nathalie Rives.


Human Reproduction | 2011

Assessment of acrosome and nuclear abnormalities in human spermatozoa with large vacuoles

Anne Perdrix; A. Travers; M.H. Chelli; Denise Escalier; J.L. Do Rego; Jean Pierre Milazzo; N. Mousset-Siméon; B. Macé; Nathalie Rives

BACKGROUND Spermatozoa with large vacuoles (SLV) may have a negative impact on embryo development. The origin of these vacuoles is unknown. We evaluated acrosome and nucleus alterations in isolated SLV, versus unselected spermatozoa. METHODS We studied 20 patients with teratozoospermia. Spermatozoa from the native semen sample and spermatozoa presenting a vacuole occupying >13.0% total head area, isolated under high magnification (×6600), were assessed. Confocal and transmission electron microscope evaluations were performed on SLV and native sperm, respectively. Acrosome morphology and DNA fragmentation were analysed using proacrosin immunolabelling (monoclonal antibody 4D4) and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labelling assay. Chromatin condensation was evaluated with aniline blue staining. Sperm aneuploidy was assessed using fluorescence in situ hybridization. RESULTS SLV represented 38.0 ± 5.10% of motile spermatozoa obtained after gradient density centrifugation. Vacuoles were mainly in the anterior and median sperm head (45.7 ± 2.90 and 46.1 ± 3.00%, respectively). Abnormal acrosomes were increased in SLV compared with unselected spermatozoa (77.8 ± 2.49 versus 70.6 ± 2.62%; P = 0.014). Microscopic observations showed an exclusively nuclear localization of large vacuoles. Complete DNA fragmentation was higher in native spermatozoa (P < 0.0001) than SLV, while chromatin condensation was altered in SLV (P < 0.0001). Aneuploidy and diploidy rates were increased in SLV (P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Sperm vacuoles were exclusively nuclear. In our selected teratozoospermic population, aneuploidy and chromatin condensation defects were the main alterations observed in SLV. Based on results from this small sample of spermatozoa, we propose a global impairment of the spermatogenesis process as a common origin of the morphological alterations.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Loss-of-Function Mutations in LRRC6, a Gene Essential for Proper Axonemal Assembly of Inner and Outer Dynein Arms, Cause Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia

Esther Kott; Philippe Duquesnoy; Bruno Copin; Marie Legendre; Florence Dastot-Le Moal; Guy Montantin; Ludovic Jeanson; Aline Tamalet; Jean-François Papon; Jean-Pierre Siffroi; Nathalie Rives; Valérie Mitchell; Jacques de Blic; André Coste; Annick Clement; Denise Escalier; Aminata Touré; Estelle Escudier; Serge Amselem

Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a group of autosomal-recessive disorders resulting from cilia and sperm-flagella defects, which lead to respiratory infections and male infertility. Most implicated genes encode structural proteins that participate in the composition of axonemal components, such as dynein arms (DAs), that are essential for ciliary and flagellar movements; they explain the pathology in fewer than half of the affected individuals. We undertook this study to further understand the pathogenesis of PCD due to the absence of both DAs. We identified, via homozygosity mapping, an early frameshift in LRRC6, a gene that encodes a leucine-rich-repeat (LRR)-containing protein. Subsequent analyses of this gene mainly expressed in testis and respiratory cells identified biallelic mutations in several independent individuals. The situs inversus observed in two of them supports a key role for LRRC6 in embryonic nodal cilia. Study of native LRRC6 in airway epithelial cells revealed that it localizes to the cytoplasm and within cilia, whereas it is absent from cells with loss-of-function mutations, in which DA protein markers are also missing. These results are consistent with the transmission-electron-microscopy data showing the absence of both DAs in cilia or flagella from individuals with LRRC6 mutations. In spite of structural and functional similarities between LRRC6 and DNAAF1, another LRR-containing protein involved in the same PCD phenotype, the two proteins are not redundant. The evolutionarily conserved LRRC6, therefore, emerges as an additional player in DA assembly, a process that is essential for proper axoneme building and that appears to be much more complex than was previously thought.


Human Reproduction | 2008

Fertility preservation in adolescent males: experience over 22 years at Rouen University Hospital

Nathalie Rives

BACKGROUND Sperm banking is a suitable procedure to prevent infertility after cancer therapy in male adolescents. We evaluated the feasibility of semen preservation in 156 adolescents aged between 13 and 20 years and then we assessed fertility outcome after treatment. METHODS Age, urogenital history, indications for cryopreservation, histological diagnosis and semen parameters were recorded. Fertility status after treatment was assessed by a questionnaire addressed to those patients who had utilized sperm storage. Post-treatment semen analysis was performed for 22 patients. RESULTS Cryopreservation was possible in 88.5% of cases. Azoospermia was detected in 2.6% of the patients at the time of diagnosis. Malignant disease accounted for 84% of our male adolescents. In this type of disease, semen parameters were significantly altered only among patients with metastatic malignant bone tumour. After treatment, nine patients presented azoospermia, five patients achieved pregnancy spontaneously, two achieved it after assisted reproductive technique using fresh ejaculated spermatozoa and one following sperm donation. Three failed with cryopreserved sperm. CONCLUSIONS Semen cryopreservation is possible for most adolescents and, regardless of disease type, may be a means of preserving fertility prior to gonadotoxic treatment that might impair the spermatogenesis process.


Fertility and Sterility | 2013

Impact of chemotherapy and radiotherapy for testicular germ cell tumors on spermatogenesis and sperm DNA: a multicenter prospective study from the CECOS network

Marie Walschaerts; Nathalie Moinard; Sylvianne Hennebicq; Jacqueline Saias; Florence Brugnon; Jacques Auger; Isabelle Berthaut; Ethel Szerman; Myriam Daudin; Nathalie Rives

OBJECTIVE To determine the consequences of adjuvant testicular germ cell tumor treatment (TGCT) on sperm characteristics and sperm DNA, and to evaluate the predictors of sperm recovery. DESIGN Multicenter prospective longitudinal study of patients analyzed before treatment and after 3, 6, 12, and 24 months. SETTING University hospitals. PATIENT(S) One hundred twenty-nine volunteer TGCT patients and a control group of 257 fertile men. INTERVENTION(S) Routine semen analyses, sperm DNA, and chromatin assessments. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Comparisons of mean sperm characteristics before and after treatment, with sperm recovery analyzed by the Kaplan-Meier method. RESULT(S) The quantitative and qualitative sperm characteristics decreased after treatment, with lowest values at 3 and 6 months and with variations according to treatment type. The mean total sperm count recovered to pretreatment values at 12 months after treatment after two or fewer bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin (BEP) cycles, but not after radiotherapy or more than two BEP cycles. Only the treatment modalities and pretreatment sperm production were related to recovery of the World Health Organization reference sperm values. An increased proportion of patients had elevated high sperm DNA stainability at 6 months after radiotherapy. CONCLUSION(S) Adjuvant treatments for testicular germ cell tumor have drastic effects on spermatogenesis and sperm chromatin quality. These new data on both the recovery period according to treatment modalities and the post-treatment chromatin status of sperm are useful tools for counseling patients wishing to conceive.


Fertility and Sterility | 2015

Sperm cryopreservation in adolescents and young adults with cancer: results of the French national sperm banking network (CECOS)

Myriam Daudin; Nathalie Rives; Marie Walschaerts; Véronique Drouineaud; Ethel Szerman; Isabelle Koscinski; Florence Eustache; Jacqueline Saias-Magnan; Aline Papaxanthos-Roche; Rosalie Cabry-Goubet; Florence Brugnon; Dominique Le Lannou; Claire Barthélémy; Jean-Marc Rigot; Thomas Fréour; Isabelle Berthaut; Sandrine Giscard d'Estaing; Françoise Touati; Marie-Claude Mélin-Blocquaux; Oxana Blagosklonov; Claire Thomas; Mohamed Benhamed; Françoise Schmitt; Jean-Marie Kunstmann; Patrick Thonneau

OBJECTIVE To determine the feasibility of fertility preservation in adolescent males with cancer. DESIGN Large multicenter retrospective study of male patients ≤20 years from 23 centers of a national network of sperm banks over a 34-year period. SETTING Sperm banks. PATIENT(S) A total of 4,345 boys and young men aged 11 to 20 years. INTERVENTION(S) Age, cancer diagnosis, feasibility of sperm banking, and sperm parameters. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Description of patients, and success of their fertility preservation. RESULT(S) We observed a mean yearly increase in referred patients of 9.5% (95% confidence interval, 9.1%-9.8%) between 1973 and 2007. Over the study period, the percentage of younger cancer patients who banked their sperm increased, especially in the 11-14 year age group, rising from 1% in 1986 to 9% in 2006. We found that 4,314 patients attempted to produce a semen sample, 4,004 succeeded, and sperm was banked for 3,616. The mean total sperm count was 61.75 × 10(6) for the 11-14 year age group, and 138.81 × 10(6) for the 18-20 year age group. It was noteworthy that intercenter variations in practices involving young patients seeking to preserve their fertility before cancer therapy were observed within this national network. CONCLUSION(S) Our results emphasize the need for decisive changes in public health policy to facilitate the access to reproductive health-care for young cancer patients.


International Journal of Andrology | 2012

Relationship between conventional sperm parameters and motile sperm organelle morphology examination (MSOME)

A. Perdrix; R. Saïdi; J. F. Ménard; E. Gruel; Jean Pierre Milazzo; B. Macé; Nathalie Rives

With the motile sperm organelle morphology examination (MSOME), spermatozoa morphology may be assessed directly on motile spermatozoa at high magnification (up to 6600×). This procedure describes more precisely spermatozoa abnormalities, especially head vacuoles. However, no consensus has been established concerning normal or abnormal MSOME criteria. The aim of our study was to define MSOME vacuole criteria assessed objectively with a digital imaging system software to establish a potential relationship between conventional semen parameters. A total of 440 semen samples were obtained from males consulting in Rouen University Hospital Reproductive Biology Laboratory. Conventional semen analysis (volume, sperm concentration, progressive motility, vitality and morphology) and MSOME assessment {sperm head length, width and area as well as vacuole number, vacuole area and relative vacuole area to sperm head [RVA (%) = [vacuole area (μm(2))/head area (μm(2))] × 100)]} were performed for each semen sample. Among our 440 males, 109 presented normal conventional semen parameters and 331 abnormal ones. Sperm head vacuoles were significantly larger in abnormal semen samples (p < 0.0001). RVA was the most discriminative MSOME criterion between normal and abnormal semen samples according to ROC curves analysis, and was negatively correlated with poor sperm morphology (r = -0.53, p < 0.0001). We concluded to (i) the normal occurrence of vacuoles in sperm head whatever the normality or abnormality of semen parameters, (ii) the discriminative function of the RVA to distinguish semen samples with normal and abnormal parameters, and (iii) the strong correlation between high RVA and poor sperm morphology.


Human Genetics | 1998

Assessment of autosome and gonosome disomy in human sperm nuclei by chromosome painting

Nathalie Rives; Sophie Mazurier; Delphine Bellet; Géraldine Joly; B. Macé

Abstract Disomy and diploidy frequencies for autosomes 1–22 and the gonosomes were assessed in 299,442 sperm nuclei from four normal fertile men by chromosome painting. This novel approach allowed us to perform a specific and sensitive detection of each chromosome. A minimum of 5000 sperm nuclei per subject were evaluated for each chromosome by dual colour fluorescence in situ hybridization. The disomy rate proved to be similar for all the autosomes (0.24%) and the diploidy rate varied from 0.12% to 0.15%. No interchromosomal or interindividual differences in the frequency of disomic and diploid sperm nuclei were observed between the four subjects. The mean frequency of XX-, YY- and XY-bearing spermatozoa was estimated to 0.17%, 0.17% and 0.32%, respectively. This strategy constitutes a new approach for detecting aneuploidy in human sperm nuclei and suggests an equal repartition of non-disjunction among chromosomes in male gametes.


Fertility and Sterility | 2014

Impact of lymphoma treatments on spermatogenesis and sperm deoxyribonucleic acid: a multicenter prospective study from the CECOS network

Marie Walschaerts; Florence Brugnon; Myriam Daudin; Isabelle Berthaut; Jacques Auger; Jacqueline Saias; Ethel Szerman; Nathalie Moinard; Nathalie Rives; Sylvianne Hennebicq

OBJECTIVE To determine consequences of lymphoma treatments on sperm characteristics and sperm DNA, and to evaluate predictors of sperm recovery. DESIGN Multicenter prospective longitudinal study of patients analyzed before treatment and after 3, 6, 12, and 24 months. SETTING University hospitals. PATIENT(S) Seventy-five Hodgkin lymphoma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients and a control group of 257 fertile men. INTERVENTION(S) Semen analyses, and sperm DNA and chromatin assessments. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Comparisons of sperm characteristics before and after treatment. RESULT(S) Patients already had altered sperm characteristics before lymphoma treatment, with no identified risk factor. Sperm count, total sperm count, motility, and vitality decreased after treatment, with lowest values at 3 and 6 months. Twelve months after treatment, mean sperm count recovered to pretreatment values after doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, darcarbacine (ABVD) or ABVD+radiotherapy, but not after doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone (CHOP) or mechlorethamine, oncovin, procarbazine, prednisone (MOPP) chemotherapies. It was noteworthy that 7% of patients remained azoospermic at 24 months. After 24 months, Kaplan-Meier estimates showed that more than 90% of patients will recover normal sperm count after ABVD or ABVD+radiotherapy vs. 61% for CHOP chemotherapies. In multivariate analyses including diagnosis and treatment protocol, only pretreatment total sperm count was related to recovery. Compared with a control group, lymphoma patients had higher sperm chromatin alterations and DNA fragmentation before any treatment. After treatment, DNA fragmentation assessed by TUNEL assay and sperm chromatin structure assay decreased from 3 and 6 months, respectively, while remaining higher than in the control group during follow-up. CONCLUSION(S) Lymphoma patients had altered sperm DNA and chromatin before treatment. Lymphoma treatment had damaging effects on spermatogenesis. These data on both the recovery period according to treatment modalities and the pre- and post-treatment chromatin status of sperm are useful tools for counseling patients wishing to conceive.


Journal of Andrology | 2010

Rapid Screening of Cryopreservation Protocols for Murine Prepubertal Testicular Tissue by Histology and PCNA Immunostaining

Jean-Pierre Milazzo; A. Travers; A. Bironneau; Athmane Safsaf; E. Gruel; C. Arnoult; B. Macé; O. Boyer; Nathalie Rives

Numerous parameters have to be tested to identify optimal conditions for prepubertal testicular tissue banking. Our study evaluated 19 different cryopreservation conditions for immature testicular tissue using a rapid screening method. Immature mice testes were cryopreserved using either 1,2-propanediol (PROH) or dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at a concentration of 0.75 or 1.5 M using a controlled slow-cooling rate protocol with (S+) or without seeding (S+). Equilibration was performed either at room temperature or at 4°C for 15 or 30 minutes. Seminiferous cord cryodamage was determined by scoring morphologic alterations. Cell proliferation ability was evaluated using a proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) antibody. Testes cryopreserved with optimal conditions were grafted into immunodeficient mice. The highest proportions of PCNA-positive nuclei and lowest morphologic alterations were observed with 1.5 M DMSO. Tissues were more altered with 0.75 M DMSO or PROH. Complete germ cell maturation was observed after allografting of testicular pieces previously frozen with 1.5 M DMSO, S+, 30 minutes. The 1.5 M DMSO, S+ or S+ protocol preserved prepubertal mice testicular tissue architecture and germ cell and Sertoli cell proliferation potential. Allografting of thawed testis fragments into immunodeficient mice confirmed that the 1.5 M DMSO, S+, 30 minutes protocol maintained testicular somatic and germ cell functions. Postthaw histologic evaluation and PCNA immunostaining are useful to rapidly test numerous freeze-thaw parameters. They may also be efficient tools to control human prepubertal frozen testis quality, within the context of a clinical application.


Human Reproduction Update | 2013

Motile sperm organelle morphology examination (MSOME) and sperm head vacuoles: state of the art in 2013

Anne Perdrix; Nathalie Rives

BACKGROUND Approximately 10 years after the first publication introducing the motile sperm organelle morphology examination (MSOME), many questions remained about sperm vacuoles: frequency, size, localization, mode of occurrence, biological significance and impact on male fertility potential. Many studies have tried to characterize sperm vacuoles, to determine the sperm abnormalities possibly associated with vacuoles, to test the diagnostic value of MSOME for male infertility or to question the benefits of intracytoplasmic morphologically selected sperm injection (IMSI). METHODS We searched PubMed for articles in the English language published in 2001-2012 regarding human sperm head vacuoles, MSOME and IMSI. RESULTS A bibliographic analysis revealed consensus for the following findings: (i) sperm vacuoles appeared frequently, often multiple and preferentially anterior; (ii) sperm vacuoles and sperm chromatin immaturity have been associated, particularly in the case of large vacuoles; (iii) teratozoospermia was a preferred indication of MSOME and IMSI. CONCLUSION The high-magnification system appears to be a powerful method to improve our understanding of human spermatozoa. However, its clinical use remains unclear in the fields of male infertility diagnosis and assisted reproduction techniques (ARTs).

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