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Publication : Normal fertilization occurs with eggs lacking the integrin alpha6beta1 and is CD9-dependent.

First Author  Miller BJ Year  2000
Journal  J Cell Biol Volume  149
Issue  6 Pages  1289-96
PubMed ID  10851025 Mgi Jnum  J:62814
Mgi Id  MGI:1859704 Doi  10.1083/jcb.149.6.1289
Citation  Miller BJ, et al. (2000) Normal fertilization occurs with eggs lacking the integrin alpha6beta1 and is CD9-dependent. J Cell Biol 149(6):1289-96
abstractText  Previous results, based on inhibition of fertilization by an anti-alpha6 integrin mAb (GoH3), suggest that the alpha6beta1 integrin on mouse eggs functions as the receptor for sperm (Almeida, E.A., A.P. Huovila, A.E. Sutherland, L.E. Stephens, P.G. Calarco, L. M. Shaw, A.M. Mercurio, A. Sonnenberg, P. Primakoff, D.G. Myles, and J.M. White. 1995. Cell. 81:1095-1104). Because the egg surface tetraspanin CD9 is essential for gamete fusion (Kaji, K., S. Oda, T. Shikano, T. Ohnuki, Y. Uematsu, J. Sakagami, N. Tada, S. Miyazaki, and A. Kudo. 2000. Nat. Genet. 24:279-282; Le Naour, F., E. Rubinstein, C. Jasmin, M. Prenant, and C. Boucheix. 2000. Science. 287:319-321; Miyado, K., G. Yamada, S. Yamada, H. Hasuwa, Y. Nakamura, F. Ryu, K. Suzuki, K. Kosai, K. Inoue, A. Ogura, M. Okabe, and E. Mekada. 2000. Science. 287:321-324) and CD9 is known to associate with integrins, recent models of gamete fusion have posited that egg CD9 acts in association with alpha6beta1 in fusion (Chen, M.S., K.S. Tung, S.A. Coonrod, Y. Takahashi, D. Bigler, A. Chang, Y. Yamashita, P.W. Kincade, J.C. Herr, and J.M. White. 1999. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 96:11830-11835; Kaji, K., S. Oda, T. Shikano, T. Ohnuki, Y. Uematsu, J. Sakagami, N. Tada, S. Miyazaki, and A. Kudo. 2000. Nat. Genet. 24:279-282; Le Naour, F., E. Rubinstein, C. Jasmin, M. Prenant, and C. Boucheix. 2000. Science. 287:319-321; Miyado, K., G. Yamada, S. Yamada, H. Hasuwa, Y. Nakamura, F. Ryu, K. Su- zuki, K. Kosai, K. Inoue, A. Ogura, M. Okabe, and E. Mekada. 2000. Science. 287:321-324). Using eggs from cultured ovaries of mice lacking the alpha6 integrin subunit, we found that the fertilization rate, fertilization index, and sperm binding were not impaired compared with wild-type or heterozygous controls. Furthermore, a reexamination of antibody inhibition, using an assay that better simulates in vivo fertilization conditions, revealed no inhibition of fusion by the GoH3 mAb. We also found that an anti-CD9 mAb completely blocks sperm fusion with either wild-type eggs or eggs lacking alpha6beta1. Based on these results, we conclude that the alpha6beta1 integrin is not essential for sperm-egg fusion, and we suggest a new model in which CD9 acts by itself, or interacts with egg protein(s) other than alpha6beta1, to function in sperm-egg fusion.
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