|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Analysis of mouse fertilin in wild-type and fertilin beta(-/-) sperm: evidence for C-terminal modification, alpha/beta dimerization, and lack of essential role of fertilin alpha in sperm-egg fusion.

First Author  Cho C Year  2000
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  222
Issue  2 Pages  289-95
PubMed ID  10837118 Mgi Jnum  J:62917
Mgi Id  MGI:1860047 Doi  10.1006/dbio.2000.9703
Citation  Cho C, et al. (2000) Analysis of mouse fertilin in wild-type and fertilin beta(-/-) sperm: evidence for C-terminal modification, alpha/beta dimerization, and lack of essential role of fertilin alpha in sperm-egg fusion. Dev Biol 222(2):289-95
abstractText  The sperm surface protein fertilin functions in sperm-egg interaction. On guinea pig and bovine sperm, fertilin is a heterodimer of alpha and beta subunits. Both subunits are initially synthesized as precursors and then proteolytically processed by removing N-terminal domains. Since the mouse is currently the main mammalian species in which fertilization is studied, in the present report, we analyzed the structure, processing, and expression of fertilin in mouse. We found that the processing of mouse fertilin beta occurs during epididymal maturation and involves changes in the cytoplasmic tail domain as well as the N-terminal domains. Although we (R. Yuan et al., 1997, J. Cell Biol. 137, 105-112) and others (M. S. Chen et al., 1999, J. Cell Biol. 144, 549-561) have previously reported that mature fertilin beta is 55-57 kDa, here we show that 55 kDa is an unrelated protein in the sperm extract which cross-reacts with an antibody that recognizes precursor, but not mature, fertilin beta. Comparison of Western blots of wild-type and fertilin beta knockout sperm revealed that authentic, mature fertilin beta is 45 kDa. We also obtained direct evidence that mouse fertilin alpha and beta exist as a heterodimer. In addition, we found that in mice lacking the fertilin beta subunit, fertilin alpha is absent from mature sperm. A widely proposed model for sperm-egg fusion suggests that fertilin alpha is the sperm component that promotes membrane fusion by undergoing a conformational change that exposes a virus-like, hydrophobic fusion peptide. Because sperm lacking fertilin alpha and fertilin beta can fuse with eggs at 50% the wild-type rate, this model is called into question. The results suggest instead that other gamete surface molecules act to promote membrane fusion and that fertilin's role in gamete fusion is in sperm-egg plasma membrane adhesion. Copyright 2000 Academic Press.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

4 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression