Literature DB >> 12242242

Mutation of a novel gene results in abnormal development of spermatid flagella, loss of intermale aggression and reduced body fat in mice.

Patrick K Campbell1, Katrina G Waymire, Robb L Heier, Catherine Sharer, Diane E Day, Heike Reimann, J Michael Jaje, Glenn A Friedrich, Margit Burmeister, Timothy J Bartness, Lonnie D Russell, Larry J Young, Michael Zimmer, Dieter E Jenne, Grant R MacGregor.   

Abstract

ROSA22 male mice are sterile due to a recessive gene-trap mutation that affects development of the spermatid flagellum. The defect involves the flagellar axoneme, which becomes unstable around the time of its assembly. Despite a subsequent complete failure in flagellar assembly, development of the spermatid head appears normal and the spermatid head is released at the correct stage in spermatogenesis. The mutation is pleiotropic. Although ROSA22 homozygote males have normal levels of circulating testosterone and display normal mating behavior, they do not exhibit intermale aggressive behavior and have reduced body fat. The mutated gene (Gtrgeo22) maps to mouse chromosome 10 and is closely flanked by two known genes, Madcam1 and Cdc34. Ribonuclease protection analysis indicates that expression of the flanking genes is unaffected by the mutation. Gtrgeo22 is expressed at low levels in epithelial cells in several tissues, as well as in testis and brain. Analysis of the peptide coding sequence suggests that Gtrgeo22 encodes a novel transmembrane protein, which contains dileucine and tyrosine-based motifs involved in intracellular sorting of transmembrane proteins. Analysis of the Gtrgeo22 gene product should provide novel insight into the molecular basis for intermale aggression and sperm flagellar development.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12242242      PMCID: PMC1462267     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genetics        ISSN: 0016-6731            Impact factor:   4.562


  48 in total

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Review 3.  Flagellar assembly in two hundred and fifty easy-to-follow steps.

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Journal:  Mamm Genome       Date:  1994-05       Impact factor: 2.957

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7.  Behavioural abnormalities in male mice lacking neuronal nitric oxide synthase.

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8.  Factors that may regulate assembly of the mammalian sperm tail deduced from a mouse t complex mutation.

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Journal:  Biol Reprod       Date:  1993-12       Impact factor: 4.285

9.  A Chlamydomonas homologue of the putative murine t complex distorter Tctex-2 is an outer arm dynein light chain.

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Authors:  G R MacGregor; B P Zambrowicz; P Soriano
Journal:  Development       Date:  1995-05       Impact factor: 6.868

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  33 in total

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4.  Loss of alpha-tubulin polyglutamylation in ROSA22 mice is associated with abnormal targeting of KIF1A and modulated synaptic function.

Authors:  Koji Ikegami; Robb L Heier; Midori Taruishi; Hiroshi Takagi; Masahiro Mukai; Shuichi Shimma; Shu Taira; Ken Hatanaka; Nobuhiro Morone; Ikuko Yao; Patrick K Campbell; Shigeki Yuasa; Carsten Janke; Grant R Macgregor; Mitsutoshi Setou
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Review 5.  Tubulin modifications and their cellular functions.

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6.  Synaptic activation modifies microtubules underlying transport of postsynaptic cargo.

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Review 7.  Polyglutamylation: a fine-regulator of protein function? 'Protein Modifications: beyond the usual suspects' review series.

Authors:  Carsten Janke; Krzysztof Rogowski; Juliette van Dijk
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8.  Hyperglutamylation of tubulin can either stabilize or destabilize microtubules in the same cell.

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Review 9.  The chemical complexity of cellular microtubules: tubulin post-translational modification enzymes and their roles in tuning microtubule functions.

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