| Literature DB >> 32987677 |
Luz Candenas1, Rosanna Chianese2.
Abstract
Infertility has become a global health issue, with approximately 50% of infertility cases generated by disorders in male reproduction. Spermatozoa are conveyed towards female genital tracts in a safe surrounding provided by the seminal plasma. Interestingly, this dynamically changing medium is a rich source of proteins, essential not only for sperm transport, but also for its protection and maturation. Most of the seminal proteins are acquired by spermatozoa in transit through exosomes (epididymosomes and prostasomes). The high number of seminal proteins, the increasing knowledge of their origins and biological functions and their differential expression in the case of azoospermia, asthenozoospermia, oligozoospermia and teratozoospermia or other conditions of male infertility have allowed the identification of a wide variety of biomarker candidates and their involvement in biological pathways, thus to strongly suggest that the proteomic landscape of seminal plasma may be a potential indicator of sperm dysfunction. This review summarizes the current knowledge in seminal plasma proteomics and its potentiality as a diagnostic tool in different degrees of male infertility.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; infertility; seminal exosomes; seminal plasma; seminal proteins; sperm
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32987677 PMCID: PMC7583765 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21197022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The fate of spermatozoa (SPZ) beyond testis. During their transit along the epididymis, SPZ receive proteins carried by epididymosomes. The GPI-anchor-mediated docking is a way of epididymosomal delivery cargo from lipid rafts of epididymosomes to lipid rafts of SPZ. Other conditions, such as pH, temperature and zinc concentration surely influence vesicle fusion. During ejaculation, SPZ encounter another subset of exosomes: the prostasomes. The recruitment of prostasomes by SPZ requires the presence of bicarbonate and an environment with a favorable pH. Proteins shuttled via exosomes are involved in important sperm functions such as sperm motility, prevention of premature acrosome reaction, protection of SPZ from oxidative stress and sperm–oocyte interaction.
Representative SP proteins proposed as biomarkers of male infertility.
| Protein | Infertility Relationship | References |
|---|---|---|
| Albumin preprotein (ALB precursor) | Exclusively expressed in patients with high levels of ROS | [ |
| Aldose reductase (ALDR) | Increased in patients with oliagoasthenoteratozoospermia and high levels of ROS | [ |
| Highly increased in bilateral varicocele | [ | |
| Alpha-1-acid glycoprotein 1 (ORM1), | Highly decreased in bilateral varicocele | [ |
| Alpha-1-acid glycoprotein 2 (ORM2) | Highly decreased in bilateral varicocele | [ |
| α-1-antichymotrypsin (AACT) | Increased in patients with oliagoasthenoteratozoospermia and high levels of ROS | [ |
| α -1-antitrypsin (SERPINA1) | Highly decreased in bilateral varicocele | [ |
| Absent in varicocele | [ | |
| Apolipoprotein D (APOD) | Highly decreased in bilateral varicocele | [ |
| Annexin 2 (ANXA2) | Increased in primary infertility | [ |
| Decreased in asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| ATP synthase subunit alpha (ATP5A1). | Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Cathepsin L1 (CTSL) | Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| CDC42 | Increased in primary infertility | [ |
| Clusterin (CLU) | Highly decreased in azoospermia | [ |
| Decreased in oligozoospermia | [ | |
| Cysteine-rich secretory protein 1 (CRISP1) | Highly decreased or absent in OA | [ |
| Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Decreased in dyspermia | [ | |
| Decreased in asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Absent in varicocele | [ | |
| Cysteine-rich secretory protein 3 (CRISP3) | Increased in varicocele | [ |
| Deoxyribonuclease-1 (DNase I) | Decreased in varicocele | [ |
| Dipeptidase 3 (DPEP3) | Expressed exclusively in fertile controls | [ |
| Diacylglycerol kinase eta (DGK) | Increased in patients with oliagoasthenoteratozoospermia and high levels of ROS | [ |
| Epididymal secretory protein E1 (NPC2) | Highly decreased or absent in azoospermia | [ |
| Absent in OA | [ | |
| Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Absent in varicocele | [ | |
| Epididymal secretory protein E3-alpha (EDDM3A) | Highly increased in asthenozoospermia | [ |
| Epididymal sperm-binding protein 1 (ELSPBP1) | Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Decreased in dyspermia | [ | |
| Extracellular matrix protein 1 (ECM1) | Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Highly increased in bilateral varicocele | [ | |
| ECM1 and Testis-expressed sequence 101 (TEX101) | Diagnosis and differentiation of OA and NOA. | [ |
| Family with sequence similarity 3 (FAM3D) | Absent in patients with high levels of ROS | [ |
| Fatty acid synthase (FASN) | Highly increased in bilateral varicocele | [ |
| Fibromodulin (FMOD) | Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Fibronectin (FN1) | Increased in azoospermia | [ |
| Highly increased in bilateral varicocele | [ | |
| Fibronectin I isoform 3 preprotein/fibronectin 1 isoform b precursor (FN1 precursor) | Absent in patients with high levels of ROS | [ |
| Galectin-3 binding protein (LGALS3BP) | Decreased in oligozoospermia | [ |
| Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Increased in azoospermia | [ | |
| Absent in patients with high levels of ROS | [ | |
| Glutathione hydrolase 1 proenzyme (GGT1) | Highly decreased in bilateral varicocele | [ |
| Gammaglutamyltransferase 7 (GGT7) | Expressed exclusively in NOA | [ |
| Glutathione S-transferase P (GSTP1) | Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Glycodelin (PAEP) | Highly increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Highly increased in asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Heat shock-related 70 kDa protein 2 (HSP72) | Increased in asthenozoospermia | [ |
| Histone H2B type 1-A (HIST1H2BA) | Expressed exclusively in fertile controls | [ |
| Increased in dyspermia | [ | |
| Insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3) | Expressed exclusively in clinical varicocele | [ |
| Insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7 (IGFBP7) | Increased in varicocele | [ |
| Kallikrein-2 (KLK2) | Decreased in dyspermia | [ |
| Decreased in asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| L-lactate dehydrogenase C chain | Expressed exclusively in fertile controls | [ |
| Highly decreased in asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Decreased in dyspermia | [ | |
| Lactotransferrin (LTF) | Increased in teratozoospermia | [ |
| Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Lactotransferrin precursor-1 peptide (LTF precursor) | Exclusively expressed in patients with high levels of ROS | [ |
| Lipocalin-1 (LCN-1) | Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) | Decreased in dyspermia | [ |
| Absent in patients with high levels of ROS | [ | |
| Membrane metallo-endopeptidase (MME) | Highly increased in patients with high levels of ROS | [ |
| N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphotransferase subunit gamma (GNPTG) | Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Orosomucoid 1 precursor (ORM1) | Decreased in teratozoospermia | [ |
| Peroxiredoxin-1 (PRDX1) | Increased in varicocele | [ |
| Peroxiredoxin-2 (PRDX2) | Increased in varicocele | [ |
| Highly increased in bilateral varicocele | [ | |
| Phosphoglycerate kinase 2 (PGK2) | Expressed exclusively in fertile controls | [ |
| Decreased in varicocele | [ | |
| Polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (PIGR) | Highly increased in bilateral varicocele | [ |
| Prolactin-inducible protein (PIP) | Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Decreased in NOA | [ | |
| Increased in azoospermia | [ | |
| Increased in patients with high levels of ROS | [ | |
| Absent in varicocele | [ | |
| Prostaglandin-H2-D-isomerase (PTGDS) | Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Highly decreased in OA | [ | |
| Prostate-specific antigen (KLK3) | Increased in oligoteratozoospermia | [ |
| Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Decreased in varicocele | [ | |
| Prostate-specific antigen isoform 4 preprotein (KLK3 precursor) | Exclusively expressed in patients with high levels of ROS | [ |
| Prostatic-specific acid phosphatase (ACPP) | Increased in azoospermia | [ |
| Decreased in varicocele | [ | |
| Prostatic-specific acid phosphatase short isoform precursor (ACPP precursor) | Increased in patients with high levels of ROS | [ |
| Prostate-specific transglutaminase 4 (TGM4) | Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Highly increased in asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Protein/nucleic acid deglycase (DJ-1) | Absent in oligoteratozoospermia | [ |
| Highly decreased in asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Semenogelin-1 (SEMG1) | Increased in oligoteratozoospermia | [ |
| Decreased in varicocele | [ | |
| Semenogelin-2 (SEMG2) | Decreased in varicocele | [ |
| Decreased in primary infertility | [ | |
| Semenogelin-2 precursor (SEMG2 precursor) | Increased in patients with high levels of ROS | [ |
| Serine/threonine protein kinase (SMG1) | Expressed exclusively in clinical varicocele | [ |
| Serum amyloid p-component (SAP) | Decreased in azoospermia, absent in patients with Sertoli cell-only syndrome | [ |
| Sorbitol dehydrogenase (SORD) | Expressed exclusively in NOA | [ |
| Decreased in asthenozoospermia | [ | |
| Extracellular Superoxide dismutase [Cu-Zn] (SOD3) | Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Superoxide-dismutase (SOD) | Decreased in azoospermia | [ |
| Tetraspanin-1 (TSPAN1), | Increased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
| Transketolase-like protein 1 (TKTL1) | Expressed exclusively in fertile samples | [ |
| Tubulin-folding cofactor B (TBCB) | Increased in patients with oliagoasthenoteratozoospermia and high levels of ROS | [ |
| Zinc alpha-2 glycoprotein 1 (AZGP1) | Increased in oligozoospermia | [ |
| Decreased in oligoasthenozoospermia | [ |
Abbreviations: NOA non-obstructive azoospermia; OA obstructive azoospermia; ROS reactive oxygen species.