| Literature DB >> 35300410 |
Tomer Avidor-Reiss1,2, Luke Achinger1, Rustem Uzbekov3,4.
Abstract
Centrioles are subcellular organelles essential for normal cell function and development; they form the cell's centrosome (a major cytoplasmic microtubule organization center) and cilium (a sensory and motile hair-like cellular extension). Centrioles with evolutionarily conserved characteristics are found in most animal cell types but are absent in egg cells and exhibit unexpectedly high structural, compositional, and functional diversity in sperm cells. As a result, the centriole's precise role in fertility and early embryo development is unclear. The centrioles are found in the spermatozoan neck, a strategic location connecting two central functional units: the tail, which propels the sperm to the egg and the head, which holds the paternal genetic material. The spermatozoan neck is an ideal site for evolutionary innovation as it can control tail movement pre-fertilization and the male pronucleus' behavior post-fertilization. We propose that human, bovine, and most other mammals-which exhibit ancestral centriole-dependent reproduction and two spermatozoan centrioles, where one canonical centriole is maintained, and one atypical centriole is formed-adapted extensive species-specific centriolar features. As a result, these centrioles have a high post-fertilization malfunction rate, resulting in aneuploidy, and miscarriages. In contrast, house mice evolved centriole-independent reproduction, losing the spermatozoan centrioles and overcoming a mechanism that causes miscarriages.Entities:
Keywords: centriole; centrosome; fertility; miscarriage; sperm
Year: 2022 PMID: 35300410 PMCID: PMC8922021 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.864692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1A Model of Sperm Centriole Function Post-fertilization. (A) In human, bovine, and many other mammalian species, the sperm has two centrioles: the proximal centriole and atypical distal centriole. During fertilization, spermatozoan centrioles are brought into the oocyte, where they form the large sperm aster, or the zygotic centrosome, and which helps pronuclear migration. The initial, single zygotic centrosome breaks into two centrosomes that move to the interface between the two pronuclei, where they polarize the paternal genome (blue) and maternal genome (pink). Failure of the sperm centrioles (red arrow) or zygotic centrosome results in embryo aneuploidy (red x) and embryo developmental failure, which are common in human and bovine. (B) In mice, the sperm has no detectable centrioles. After fertilization, the many small, acentriolar, cytoplasmic asters in the oocyte continue to function. The pronuclear genomes are homogenous. Embryo aneuploidy is very low, and embryo development is robust.