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Publication : A novel requirement in mammalian spermatid differentiation for the DAZ-family protein Boule.

First Author  VanGompel MJ Year  2010
Journal  Hum Mol Genet Volume  19
Issue  12 Pages  2360-9
PubMed ID  20335278 Mgi Jnum  J:160482
Mgi Id  MGI:4454511 Doi  10.1093/hmg/ddq109
Citation  VanGompel MJ, et al. (2010) A novel requirement in mammalian spermatid differentiation for the DAZ-family protein Boule. Hum Mol Genet 19(12):2360-9
abstractText  Reproduction is required for the survival of all animals, yet few reproductive genes have been shown to have a conserved requirement for fertility across the animal kingdom. Remarkably, the RNA binding protein BOULE, the oldest member of the DAZ (Deleted in AZoospermia) family of genes, appears to have maintained its conserved functional motif and spermatogenic expression from insects to humans. Boule mutations lead to a pachytene meiotic arrest before metaphase in Drosophila males and C. elegans females, and human BOULE can restore meiosis in the fly testis, suggesting a conserved meiotic function of human BOULE. However, the physiological function of BOULE in mammals is not yet known. We generated Boule knockout mice and found it to be required only for spermatogenesis, as in Drosophila. Interestingly, meiosis completed normally in the absence of Boule, and haploid round spermatids were readily detected. However, round spermatids did not progress beyond step 6, revealing a novel role for Boule in spermiogenesis, the differentiation of round spermatids into mature spermatozoa. Expression of key regulators of spermiogenesis was unaffected in Boule(-/-) mice, suggesting that Boule regulates germ-cell differentiation through a novel pathway.
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