| Literature DB >> 28630322 |
Julio M Castaneda1,2, Rong Hua3,4, Haruhiko Miyata2, Asami Oji2,5, Yueshuai Guo3,4, Yiwei Cheng3,4, Tao Zhou3,4, Xuejiang Guo3,4, Yiqiang Cui3,4, Bin Shen3, Zibin Wang3, Zhibin Hu3,6, Zuomin Zhou3,4, Jiahao Sha3,4, Renata Prunskaite-Hyyrylainen1,7,8, Zhifeng Yu1,9, Ramiro Ramirez-Solis10, Masahito Ikawa11,5,12, Martin M Matzuk13,7,9,14,15,16, Mingxi Liu17,4.
Abstract
Flagella and cilia are critical cellular organelles that provide a means for cells to sense and progress through their environment. The central component of flagella and cilia is the axoneme, which comprises the "9+2" microtubule arrangement, dynein arms, radial spokes, and the nexin-dynein regulatory complex (N-DRC). Failure to properly assemble components of the axoneme leads to defective flagella and in humans leads to a collection of diseases referred to as ciliopathies. Ciliopathies can manifest as severe syndromic diseases that affect lung and kidney function, central nervous system development, bone formation, visceral organ organization, and reproduction. T-Complex-Associated-Testis-Expressed 1 (TCTE1) is an evolutionarily conserved axonemal protein present from Chlamydomonas (DRC5) to mammals that localizes to the N-DRC. Here, we show that mouse TCTE1 is testis-enriched in its expression, with its mRNA appearing in early round spermatids and protein localized to the flagellum. TCTE1 is 498 aa in length with a leucine rich repeat domain at the C terminus and is present in eukaryotes containing a flagellum. Knockout of Tcte1 results in male sterility because Tcte1-null spermatozoa show aberrant motility. Although the axoneme is structurally normal in Tcte1 mutant spermatozoa, Tcte1-null sperm demonstrate a significant decrease of ATP, which is used by dynein motors to generate the bending force of the flagellum. These data provide a link to defining the molecular intricacies required for axoneme function, sperm motility, and male fertility.Entities:
Keywords: asthenozoospermia; glycolysis; male infertility; mutant mouse; testis-specific gene
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28630322 PMCID: PMC5502601 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1621279114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205