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Compartmentalization of membrane trafficking, glucose transport, glycolysis, actin, tubulin and the proteasome in the cytoplasmic droplet/Hermes body of epididymal sperm.

Authors :
Au CE
Hermo L
Byrne E
Smirle J
Fazel A
Kearney RE
Smith CE
Vali H
Fernandez-Rodriguez J
Simon PH
Mandato C
Nilsson T
Bergeron JJ
Source :
Open biology [Open Biol] 2015 Aug; Vol. 5 (8).
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Discovered in 1909 by Retzius and described mainly by morphology, the cytoplasmic droplet of sperm (renamed here the Hermes body) is conserved among all mammalian species but largely undefined at the molecular level. Tandem mass spectrometry of the isolated Hermes body from rat epididymal sperm characterized 1511 proteins, 43 of which were localized to the structure in situ by light microscopy and two by quantitative electron microscopy localization. Glucose transporter 3 (GLUT-3) glycolytic enzymes, selected membrane traffic and cytoskeletal proteins were highly abundant and concentrated in the Hermes body. By electron microscope gold antibody labelling, the Golgi trafficking protein TMED7/p27 localized to unstacked flattened cisternae of the Hermes body, as did GLUT-3, the most abundant protein. Its biogenesis was deduced through the mapping of protein expression for all 43 proteins during male germ cell differentiation in the testis. It is at the terminal step 19 of spermiogenesis that the 43 characteristic proteins accumulated in the nascent Hermes body.<br /> (© 2015 The Authors.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2046-2441
Volume :
5
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Open biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26311421
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsob.150080