| Literature DB >> 30350487 |
Sezgin Gunes1,2, Pallav Sengupta3,2, Ralf Henkel4,2, Aabed Alguraigari5,2, Mariana Marques Sinigaglia6,2, Malik Kayal7,2, Ahmad Joumah7,2, Ashok Agarwal8.
Abstract
Microtubules are the prime component of the cytoskeleton along with microfilaments. Being vital for organelle transport and cellular divisions during spermatogenesis and sperm motility process, microtubules ascertain functional capacity of sperm. Also, microtubule based structures such as axoneme and manchette are crucial for sperm head and tail formation. This review (a) presents a concise, yet detailed structural overview of the microtubules, (b) analyses the role of microtubule structures in various male reproductive functions, and (c) presents the association of microtubular dysfunctions with male infertility. Considering the immense importance of microtubule structures in the formation and maintenance of physiological functions of sperm cells, this review serves as a scientific trigger in stimulating further male infertility research in this direction.Entities:
Keywords: Axoneme; Infertility, male; Kartagener syndrome; Microtubule-associated proteins
Year: 2018 PMID: 30350487 PMCID: PMC6920067 DOI: 10.5534/wjmh.180066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Mens Health ISSN: 2287-4208 Impact factor: 5.400
Fig. 1The structure and dynamics of microtubule: Microtubules are composed of α- and β-tubulin heterodimers that polymerizes using guanosine-5′-triphosphate (GTP) to form a single proto-filament. The tubulins are arranged in a polarized manner whereby the α-tubulins are exposed at the negative (−) and the β-tubulins at the positive (+) end. The (−) end is more stable, whereas the (+) end can polymerize (grow) and depolymerize (shrink) rapidly, thus rendering microtubules highly dynamic structures. GDP: guanosine 5′-diphosphate.
Fig. 2Schematic diagram of the transport pathways of manchette. Intra-manchette transport (IMT) transfers structural and functional proteins via the microtubule tracks and motor proteins to the basal body region where they are stored. During intra-flagellar transport (IFT), proteins are transported from the sperm cell body to the tip of the flagellum and then back to the sperm head along the axonemal microtubules. Outward or anterograde movement (from the sperm head to the tail) is directly associated with microtubule motor kinesin-2 while inward or retrograde movement is related with dynein 1b. Abnormalities of IMT or IFT microtubule structure could lead to sperm head, neck and tail aberrations because of disruption of the protein delivery to the correct assembly site during spermiogenesis.
Fig. 3Schematic representation of flagellum structure. Schematic representation of flagellum structure. A cross-section of flagellum mid-piece shows plasma membrane and mitochondrial sheath surrounding the outer dense fibers. The axoneme displays the characteristic 9+2 arrangement of the microtubules with nine microtubule doublets around the periphery and two singlet microtubules in the center. Adjacent microtubule doublet are connected by Nexin.
Fig. 4The function of microtubules during spermatogenesis.
Fig. 5Abnormalities of the cilia (1) dynein arms abnormalities involve either partial or complete absence of outer dynein arm/inner dynein arm, (2) radial spokes abnormalities including the absence of spokes or deviated central microtubules, (3) inappropriate directionality of cilia, caused by partial or complete absence of the central microtubules, and (4) abnormal number of peripheral microtubules. Atypical arrangements for example 8+1, 8+2, 8+3, or 7+2 have been observed under the microscope on cross-section.
Representative mutations of selected genes and their consequences for axonemal structure in human and functional defects in PCD
| Gene | Localization of protein | Structural defect | Functional defect | Infertility phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ODA | Absence of ciliary ODAs | Ciliary dysmotility | NI | [ | |
| ODA | Reduced ODAs | Immotile cilia/situs inversus | NI | [ | |
| N-DRC | MT disorganization and IDA defect | Hyperkinetic, stiff cilia | OAT | [ | |
| CCDC151 | Complete loss of ODA | Ciliary dysmotility | NI | [ | |
| TTC25 | Defect in ODA docking | Ciliary dysmotility | NI | [ | |
| N-DRC (DRC3) | Axonemal dysorganization | Improper maturaion spermatid | NI | [ | |
| Radial spoke head proteins | Central complex defect and absence of radial spokes | Sperm immotility | NI | [ | |
| ODA | Short or missing ODA; ODA defects | Immotile cilia/situs inversus | NI | [ | |
| ODA | Normal ciliary ultra-structure | Abnormal nonflexible beating pattern | NI | [ | |
| ODA | ODA defect | Immotility/residual motility in cilia | Asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| ODA | ODA defect | Immotile cilia | NI | [ | |
| ODA | Absence of ODA | Impaired motility | NI | [ | |
| DA assembling | Absence of ODA & IDA | Immotile cilia | NI | [ | |
| DA assembling | Absence of ODA & IDA | Immotile cilia | Asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| DA assembling | Absence of ODA & IDA, Abnormal ultrastructure | Immotile cilia | NI | [ | |
| DA | Dynein arm defect | Immotile cilia | NI | [ | |
| ODA+IDA | ODA & IDA Defects | Sperm immotility | Male infertility | [ | |
| CP | CP defects | Sperm immotility | Asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| SPAG1 | Defective ODA and IDA | Complete ciliary immotility | NI | [ | |
| ZMYND10 | DA loss | Immotile sperm | Male infertility | [ |
PCD: primary ciliary dyskinesia, ODA: outer dynein arm, N-DRC: nexin-dynein regulatory complex, DA: dynein arms, IDA: inner dynein arm, CP: central pair, NI: not indicated, OAT: oligoasthenoteratozoospermia.
Genes and proteins associated with manchette abnormalities in mice, and their functions in sperm morphological alterations
| Gene | Protein | Mutations associated with sperm morphological disorder | Recognized/possible function in spermatogenesis | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KATNB1 | Motility disorders, elongated and knobbed-like manchette | MT severing | [ | |
| LRGUK1 | Short tail, elongated manchette and manchette's MT disorganized | Perinuclear ring movement | [ | |
| SUN4 | Round-headed sperm, coiled tail and disorganized manchette | Machette-nucleus connection (part of LINC complex) | [ | |
| SUN5 | Autosomal-recessive acephalic spermatozoa syndrome | Machette-nucleus connection (part of LINC complex) | [ | |
| PRSS1 (testitin) | Decreased motility, angulated and curled tails, fragile necks, and dramatically increased susceptibility to decapitation, acephalic spermatozoa syndrome | Directs epididymal sperm cell maturation and sperm-fertilizing ability | [ | |
| OAZ-t/OAZ-3 | Acephalic spermatozoa syndrome | Rigid connection of sperm tails to heads in mouse | [ | |
| Centrobin | Teratozoospermia, decapitated sperm syndrome | Spermatid head shaping and assembly of | [ | |
| ODF1/HSPB10 | Decapitated sperm head syndrome | Essential for tight linkage of sperm head to tail | [ | |
| SPATA6 | Acephalic spermatozoa | Assembly of the sperm connecting piece and tight head-tail conjunction | [ | |
| KASH | Disoriented sperm head | Bridge the inner and outer membranes of the nuclear envelope | [ | |
| HOOK1 | Short tail, elongated manchette and disorganized manchette MT | Microtubule and vesicle binding protein | [ | |
| IFT88 | Absent axoneme, disorganized tail, elongated manchette | Part of IFT complex B | [ | |
| KIF3A | Absent axoneme, disorganized tail, elongated manchette and knobbed-like shaped head | IFT motor protein | [ |
SUN: Sad-1/UNC-84, OAZ: ornithine decarboxylase antizymes, ODF: outer dense fiber, HSP: HEAT shock protein, KASH: Klarsicht/ANC-1/Syne/homology, MT: microtubules, LINC: linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton, IFT: intra-flagellar transport.