| Literature DB >> 30937958 |
Feng Wang1,2, Xiao-Fang Ren1, Zheng Chen1, Xiao-Long Li2, Hai-Jing Zhu2, Sen Li2, Xiang-Hong Ou2, Cheng Zhang1, Fei-Xiong Zhang1, Bao-Chang Zhu1.
Abstract
The sterility of hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) knockout mice clearly shows the link between lipid metabolism and spermatogenesis. However, which substrate or product of this multifunctional lipase affects spermatogenesis is unclear. We found that an HSL protein with a His-tag at the N-terminus preserved the normal hydrolase activity of cholesteryl ester (CE) but the triglyceride lipase (TG) activity significantly decreased in vitro. Therefore, mice with this functionally incomplete HSL (His-HSL) were produced on a background of HSL deficiency (HSL-/- h). As a result, HSL-/- h testis has an 8.65-fold higher CE activity than wild-type testis but a twofold higher TG activity than wild-type testis. To compare His-HSL and wild-type HSL in vitro and in vivo, we confirmed that the His-tag significantly suppressed HSL TG activity. From our results, we believe that TG activity was affected by the His-tag insertion, but CE activity was not influenced. Furthermore, the His-tag protected HSL from binding to the inhibitor BAY. From our study, TG activity and BAY binding sites were affected by N-terminal His-tag insertion.Entities:
Keywords: cholesterol metabolism; hormone-sensitive lipase; lipid metabolism; male infertility; spermatogenesis
Year: 2019 PMID: 30937958 DOI: 10.1002/jcb.28643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biochem ISSN: 0730-2312 Impact factor: 4.429