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Evolutionary diversification of SPANX-N sperm protein gene structure and expression.

Authors :
Natalay Kouprina
Vladimir N Noskov
Adam Pavlicek
N Keith Collins
Pamela D Schoppee Bortz
Chris Ottolenghi
Dmitri Loukinov
Paul Goldsmith
John I Risinger
Jung-Hyun Kim
V Anne Westbrook
Gregory Solomon
Hanna Sounders
John C Herr
Jerzy Jurka
Victor Lobanenkov
David Schlessinger
Vladimir Larionov
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 2, Iss 4, p e359 (2007)
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2007.

Abstract

The sperm protein associated with nucleus in the X chromosome (SPANX) genes cluster at Xq27 in two subfamilies, SPANX-A/D and SPANX-N. SPANX-A/D is specific for hominoids and is fairly well characterized. The SPANX-N gave rise to SPANX-A/D in the hominoid lineage approximately 7 MYA. Given the proposed role of SPANX genes in spermatogenesis, we have extended studies to SPANX-N gene evolution, variation, regulation of expression, and intra-sperm localization. By immunofluorescence analysis, SPANX-N proteins are localized in post-meiotic spermatids exclusively, like SPANX-A/D. But in contrast to SPANX-A/D, SPANX-N are found in all ejaculated spermatozoa rather than only in a subpopulation, are localized in the acrosome rather than in the nuclear envelope, and are expressed at a low level in several nongametogenic adult tissues as well as many cancers. Presence of a binding site for CTCF and its testis-specific paralogue BORIS in the SPANX promoters suggests, by analogy to MAGE-A1 and NY-ESO-1, that their activation in spermatogenesis is mediated by the programmed replacement of CTCF by BORIS. Based on the relative density of CpG, the more extended expression of SPANX-N compared to SPANX-A/D in nongametogenic tissues is likely attributed to differences in promoter methylation. Our findings suggest that the recent duplication of SPANX genes in hominoids was accompanied by different localization of SPANX-N proteins in post-meiotic sperm and additional expression in several nongonadal tissues. This suggests a corresponding functional diversification of SPANX gene families in hominoids. SPANX proteins thus provide unique targets to investigate their roles in the function of spermatozoa, selected malignancies, and for SPANX-N, in other tissues as well.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
2
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b55759c6a8b47629bffb4a26a4f7f80
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000359