Advertisement
Advertisement
Zika virus
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
An aedes aegypti mosquito is pictured on a leaf in San Jose, Costa Rica. Photo: Reuters

New | Zika ravages mice testes, raising worries over male fertility: study

Virus sharply cuts sperm counts in mice by up to 90 per cent by weight and question is whether same thing will be seen in men

Zika virus

Zika virus ravages the testes of male mice, sharply reducing sperm counts and fertility, says a study that raises a new spectre about its threat to people.

Experiments found testes of infected mice shrank about 90 per cent by weight, while their output of useful sperm fell by three-quarters on average, and often more.

Now it’s time to find out if Zika causes similar damage in men, experts said.

“We just don’t know that yet,” said Michael Diamond of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, a senior author of the study. The virus is known to infect a man’s reproductive system and persist in sperm and semen, “so it’s in the right place,” he said.

Diamond said he suspects that in mice, the damage is permanent.

But mice are not men, and experts unconnected with the study agreed that it can’t be assumed that the mouse results apply to people.

A government health worker sprays chemicals to kill mosquitoes at the MyayNu condominium building in Yangon, Myanmar, Photo: EPA

Shannan Rossi, who studies Zika in mice at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, noted that the researchers had suppressed the animals’ immune system defence against the virus. That’s a standard step in such experiments but it adds another level of difference from humans, she said.

Zika, which is transmitted by the bite of a tropical mosquito, is such a mild disease in people that most who get it don’t even know they are sick. But it can cause serious birth defects if women are infected while pregnant, so health officials have been concerned mostly with helping women who are pregnant or about to become pregnant avoid the disease.

Doctor Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Maryland, said the study alerts researchers to look for effects in men.

“Don’t jump to the conclusion right off that this is definitely what is happening to the human,” he said. But the mouse finding is a “red flag you need to pursue.”

The mouse results appear in a paper released Monday by the journal Nature. They show the virus attacks the anatomical structure where sperm are made and reach maturity. Testosterone levels also fell.

The infected mice were able to impregnate females at only about one-fourth the normal rate. And in females that got pregnant, the number of fetuses was less than half of normal.

Post