| Literature DB >> 25028670 |
Won-Hee Song1, John William Oman Ballard2, Young-Joo Yi3, Peter Sutovsky1.
Abstract
Mitochondria, the energy-generating organelles, play a role in numerous cellular functions including adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production, cellular homeostasis, and apoptosis. Maternal inheritance of mitochondria and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is universally observed in humans and most animals. In general, high levels of mitochondrial heteroplasmy might contribute to a detrimental effect on fitness and disease resistance. Therefore, a disposal of the sperm-derived mitochondria inside fertilized oocytes assures normal preimplantation embryo development. Here we summarize the current research and knowledge concerning the role of autophagic pathway and ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent proteolysis in sperm mitophagy in mammals, including humans. Current data indicate that sperm mitophagy inside the fertilized oocyte could occur along multiple degradation routes converging on autophagic clearance of paternal mitochondria. The influence of assisted reproductive therapies (ART) such as intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), mitochondrial replacement (MR), and assisted fertilization of oocytes from patients of advanced reproductive age on mitochondrial function, inheritance, and fitness and for the development and health of ART babies will be of particular interest to clinical audiences. Altogether, the study of sperm mitophagy after fertilization has implications in the timing of evolution and developmental and reproductive biology and in human health, fitness, and management of mitochondrial disease.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25028670 PMCID: PMC4083708 DOI: 10.1155/2014/981867
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Nomenclature and aliases of autophagy-related genes.
| Full name (human) | Yeast |
| Human/mammalian | Aliases | Detectable in spermatozoa | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autophagy-related 5 | N/A | Atg5 | ATG5 | ASP; APG5; APG5L; hAPG5; APG5-like | No | Early stage of autophagosome formation |
| GABA(A) receptor-associated protein | ATG8 | Lgg-1 | GABARAP | MM46; ATG8A; GABARAP-a | Yes | Nonselective sequestration of cytoplasmic material for vacuolar degradation |
| Microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain alpha | N/A | Lgg-2 | MAP1LC3A | LC3; LC3 A; ATG8E; MAP1ALC3B | Yes | Recruits protein cargo to the phagophore/isolation membrane; remains associated with the mature autophagosome |
| Sequestosome 1 | N/A | N/A | SQSTM1 | p62; p60; A170 | Yes | Binds to ubiquitinated proteins; interacts with both LC3 and GABARAP |
| Valosin containing protein/protein dislocase | CDC48 | CDC-48.1 | VCP | p97 | Yes | Extracts ubiquitinated proteins from organelle membranes; presents them to 26S proteasome |
| Histone deacetylase 6 | N/A | HAD-6 | HDAC6 | HD6 | Yes | Transports ubiquitinated misfolded protein aggregates/aggresomes to phagophore |
| Parkin (PARK2) | N/A | pdr-1 | PARK2 | PDJ; PRKN | Not known | Ubiquitin ligase; induces selective autophagy of damaged mitochondria |
Figure 2Immunofluorescence localization of GABARAP, p62/SQSTM1, and VCP in porcine zygotes. (a) Autophagy receptor/ubiquitin-like protein GABARAP accumulates around male pronucleus and sperm mitochondria of an embryo treated with proteasomal inhibitor MG132 (100 uM) at 30 hr after insemination. Inhibition of proteasomal proteolysis is known to induce compensatory activation of autophagic pathway. (b) Ubiquitin-binding protein p62/SQSTM1 is detected in the mitochondria region of spermatozoa in embryo cultured for 30 hr after IVF. SQSTM1 is an ubiquitin-receptor that links UPS to autophagic pathway. (c) Protein dislocase p97/VCP is present in the mitochondrial sheath of spermatozoa in a porcine zygote cultured for 30 hr after IVF. Dislocase VCP recognizes and extracts ubiquitinated mitochondrial membrane proteins, presenting them to 26S proteasome for degradation.
Figure 1Diagram of candidate pathways leading to sperm mitophagy by autophagy and ubiquitin-proteasome system. Generally, the process of autophagy starts with the aggregation and ubiquitination of proteins or organelles that need to be recycled. Multiubiquitin chains on such aggregates are recognized by the ubiquitin-binding autophagy receptors and are brought to phagophore, a membranous organelle that eventually closes around the protein aggregate to form an autophagosome. In the finals step, autophagosome fuses with a lysosome that contains proteases able to degrade the protein cargo. In some branches of this pathway, protein aggregates or ubiquitinated proteins extracted from organelle membranes are targeted for degradation by the 26S proteasome, a multisubunit ubiquitin-specific protease. At least three previously characterized pathways could be involved in the degradation of sperm mitochondria inside a fertilized oocyte: (1) Autophagy-associated ubiquitin-receptor p62/SQSTM1 recognizes ubiquitinated cargo and interacts with autophagosome-binding ubiquitin-like proteins, such as LC3 or GABARAP; these autophagy receptors guide the protein cargo to phagophore; (2) ubiquitinated proteins of mitochondrial origin form aggresomes, the protein aggregates induced by the ubiquitin-binding adaptor protein HDAC6, which transport the ubiquitinated proteins towards degradation site, the phagophore, along microtubule tracks. (3) Protein dislocase p97/VCP extracts and presents the ubiquitinated mitochondrial membrane proteins to the 26S proteasome, the ubiquitin-dependent protease, without the involvement of phagophore.