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Age-Associated Proteomic Changes in Human Spermatozoa
by
Khan, Firdous Ahmad
, Hamoda, Taha Abo-Almagd Abdel-Meguid
, Mohammed, Arif
, Memili, Erdogan
, Beg, Mohd Amin
, Alkhzaim, Ali Hasan
, Feugang, Jean Magloire
, Sharma, Priyanka
, Assiri, Abdullah Mohammed
, Ismail, Abrar Osama
, Baothman, Omar Mohammed
, Alaiya, Ayodele
, Shinwari, Zakia
, Abuzenadah, Adel Mohammad
, Sheikh, Ishfaq Ahmad
, Abuzinadah, Rinad Fahad
in
Adult
/ Age groups
/ Aging
/ Aging - metabolism
/ Analysis
/ Annexins
/ Birth rate
/ Carbohydrates
/ Chromosomal proteins
/ Demographics
/ Enzymes
/ Fertility
/ Higher education
/ Humans
/ In vitro fertilization
/ Industrial development
/ Infertility
/ Kinases
/ Male
/ Metabolism
/ Middle Aged
/ Miscarriage
/ Morphology
/ Motility
/ Nervous system diseases
/ Oxidative stress
/ Phosphorylation
/ Proteins
/ Proteome - metabolism
/ Proteomics
/ Proteomics - methods
/ Reproductive technologies
/ Sperm
/ Sperm Motility
/ Spermatogenesis
/ Spermatozoa
/ Spermatozoa - metabolism
/ Tandem Mass Spectrometry
/ Trends
/ Young Adult
/ Young adults
2025
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Age-Associated Proteomic Changes in Human Spermatozoa
by
Khan, Firdous Ahmad
, Hamoda, Taha Abo-Almagd Abdel-Meguid
, Mohammed, Arif
, Memili, Erdogan
, Beg, Mohd Amin
, Alkhzaim, Ali Hasan
, Feugang, Jean Magloire
, Sharma, Priyanka
, Assiri, Abdullah Mohammed
, Ismail, Abrar Osama
, Baothman, Omar Mohammed
, Alaiya, Ayodele
, Shinwari, Zakia
, Abuzenadah, Adel Mohammad
, Sheikh, Ishfaq Ahmad
, Abuzinadah, Rinad Fahad
in
Adult
/ Age groups
/ Aging
/ Aging - metabolism
/ Analysis
/ Annexins
/ Birth rate
/ Carbohydrates
/ Chromosomal proteins
/ Demographics
/ Enzymes
/ Fertility
/ Higher education
/ Humans
/ In vitro fertilization
/ Industrial development
/ Infertility
/ Kinases
/ Male
/ Metabolism
/ Middle Aged
/ Miscarriage
/ Morphology
/ Motility
/ Nervous system diseases
/ Oxidative stress
/ Phosphorylation
/ Proteins
/ Proteome - metabolism
/ Proteomics
/ Proteomics - methods
/ Reproductive technologies
/ Sperm
/ Sperm Motility
/ Spermatogenesis
/ Spermatozoa
/ Spermatozoa - metabolism
/ Tandem Mass Spectrometry
/ Trends
/ Young Adult
/ Young adults
2025
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Age-Associated Proteomic Changes in Human Spermatozoa
by
Khan, Firdous Ahmad
, Hamoda, Taha Abo-Almagd Abdel-Meguid
, Mohammed, Arif
, Memili, Erdogan
, Beg, Mohd Amin
, Alkhzaim, Ali Hasan
, Feugang, Jean Magloire
, Sharma, Priyanka
, Assiri, Abdullah Mohammed
, Ismail, Abrar Osama
, Baothman, Omar Mohammed
, Alaiya, Ayodele
, Shinwari, Zakia
, Abuzenadah, Adel Mohammad
, Sheikh, Ishfaq Ahmad
, Abuzinadah, Rinad Fahad
in
Adult
/ Age groups
/ Aging
/ Aging - metabolism
/ Analysis
/ Annexins
/ Birth rate
/ Carbohydrates
/ Chromosomal proteins
/ Demographics
/ Enzymes
/ Fertility
/ Higher education
/ Humans
/ In vitro fertilization
/ Industrial development
/ Infertility
/ Kinases
/ Male
/ Metabolism
/ Middle Aged
/ Miscarriage
/ Morphology
/ Motility
/ Nervous system diseases
/ Oxidative stress
/ Phosphorylation
/ Proteins
/ Proteome - metabolism
/ Proteomics
/ Proteomics - methods
/ Reproductive technologies
/ Sperm
/ Sperm Motility
/ Spermatogenesis
/ Spermatozoa
/ Spermatozoa - metabolism
/ Tandem Mass Spectrometry
/ Trends
/ Young Adult
/ Young adults
2025
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Journal Article
Age-Associated Proteomic Changes in Human Spermatozoa
2025
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Overview
Advancing age in men significantly contributes to declining sperm fertility. Information on age-related proteomic changes in spermatozoa is limited. This study involved normal fertile Arab men in three age groups: young adult (21–30 years; n = 6), late adult (31–40 years; n = 7), and advanced age (40–51 years; n = 5). Gradient-purified spermatozoa were analyzed using LC-MS/MS and proteomic data were processed using Progenesis QI (QIfp) v3.0 and UniProt/SwissProt. Significantly enriched annotations and clustering of proteins in the proteomic datasets were identified (2-fold change; p < 0.05). A total of 588 proteins were identified, with 93% shared across the three groups. Unique proteins were MYLK4 for the young adult group, PRSS57 for the late adult group, and HMGB4, KRT4, LPGAT1, OXCT2, and MGRN1 for the advanced age group. Furthermore, 261 (44%) proteins were differentially expressed (p < 0.05) across the three groups. Functional enrichment analysis suggested an aging-related significant increase in pathways associated with neurodegenerative diseases and protein folding, alongside decreases in glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, flagellated sperm motility, acetylation, phosphoprotein modifications, oxidation processes, and Ubl conjugation. Cluster analysis highlighted significantly upregulated proteins in young adults (e.g., H2BC1, LAP3, SQLE, LTF, PDIA4, DYNLT2) and late adults (e.g., ATP5F1B, ODF2, TUBA3C, ENO1, SPO11, TEX45, TEKT3), whereas most proteins in the advanced age group exhibited downregulation (e.g., SPESP1, RAB10, SEPTIN4, RAB15, PTPN7, USP5, ANXA1, PRDX1). In conclusion, this study revealed aging-associated proteomic changes in spermatozoa that impact critical processes, including spermatogenesis, motility, metabolism, and fertilization, potentially contributing to fertility decline. These changes provide a molecular framework for developing therapies to preserve sperm proteostasis and enhance fertility in older men.
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