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Publication : Mice lacking the UBC4-testis gene have a delay in postnatal testis development but normal spermatogenesis and fertility.

First Author  Bedard N Year  2005
Journal  Mol Cell Biol Volume  25
Issue  15 Pages  6346-54
PubMed ID  16024774 Mgi Jnum  J:100020
Mgi Id  MGI:3586395 Doi  10.1128/MCB.25.15.6346-6354.2005
Citation  Bedard N, et al. (2005) Mice lacking the UBC4-testis gene have a delay in postnatal testis development but normal spermatogenesis and fertility. Mol Cell Biol 25(15):6346-54
abstractText  Activation of ubiquitination occurs during spermatogenesis and is dependent on the induction of isoforms of the UBC4 family of ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes. The UBC4-testis isoform is testis specific, is induced in round spermatids, and demonstrates biochemical functions distinct from a ubiquitously expressed isoform UBC4-1. To explore further the function of UBC4-testis, mice bearing inactivation of this gene were produced. Homozygous (-/-) mice showed normal body growth and fertility. Although testis weight and morphology were normal in testes from adult mice, examination of young mice during the first wave of spermatogenesis revealed that testes were approximately 10% smaller in weight at 40 and 45 days of age but had become normal at 65 days of age. Overall protein content, levels of ubiquitinated proteins, and ubiquitin-conjugating activity did not differ between wild-type and homozygous (-/-) mice. Spermatid number, as well as the motility of spermatozoa isolated from the epididymis, was also normal in homozygous (-/-) mice. To determine whether the germ cells lacking UBC4-testis might be more sensitive to stress, testes from wild-type and knockout mice were exposed to heat stress by implantation in the abdominal cavity. Testes from both strains of mice showed similar rates of degeneration in response to heat. The lack of an obvious phenotype did not appear to be due to induction of other UBC4 isoforms, as shown by two-dimensional gel immunoblotting. Our data indicate that UBC4-testis plays a role in early maturation of the testis and suggest that the many UBC4 isoforms have mixed redundant and specific functions.
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