Back to Search Start Over

Spermatozoa lacking Fertilization Influencing Membrane Protein (FIMP) fail to fuse with oocytes in mice

Authors :
1000070578848
Fujihara, Yoshitaka
1000000817033
Lu, Yonggang
1000050712551
Noda, Taichi
1000050803417
Oji, Asami
Larasati, Tamara
1000060813631
Kojima, Kanako
Yu, Zhifeng
Matzuk, Ryan M.
Matzuk, Martin M.
1000020304066
Ikawa, Masahito
1000070578848
Fujihara, Yoshitaka
1000000817033
Lu, Yonggang
1000050712551
Noda, Taichi
1000050803417
Oji, Asami
Larasati, Tamara
1000060813631
Kojima, Kanako
Yu, Zhifeng
Matzuk, Ryan M.
Matzuk, Martin M.
1000020304066
Ikawa, Masahito
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Fujihara, Y., Lu, Y., Noda, T., Oji, A., Larasati, T., Kojima-Kita, K., . . . Ikawa, M. (2020). Spermatozoa lacking fertilization influencing membrane protein (FIMP) fail to fuse with oocytes in mice. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(17), 9393-9400. doi:10.1073/pnas.1917060117<br />Sperm-oocyte fusion is a critical event in mammalian fertilization, categorized by three indispensable proteins. Sperm membrane protein IZUMO1 and its counterpart oocyte membrane protein JUNO make a protein complex allowing sperm to interact with the oocyte, and subsequent sperm-oocyte fusion. Oocyte tetraspanin protein CD9 also contributes to sperm-oocyte fusion. However, the fusion process cannot be explained solely by these three essential factors. In this study, we focused on analyzing a testis-specific gene 4930451I11Rik and generated mutant mice using the CRISPR/Cas9 system. Although IZUMO1 remained in 4930451I11Rik knockout (KO) spermatozoa, the KO spermatozoa were unable to fuse with oocytes and the KO males were severely subfertile. 4930451I11Rik encodes two isoforms: a transmembrane (TM) form and a secreted form. Both CRISPR/Cas9-mediated TM deletion and transgenic (Tg) rescue with the TM form revealed that only the TM form plays a critical role in sperm-oocyte fusion. Thus, we renamed this TM form Fertilization Influencing Membrane Protein (FIMP). The mCherry-tagged FIMP TM form was localized to the sperm equatorial segment where the sperm-oocyte fusion event occurs. Thus, FIMP is a sperm-specific transmembrane protein that is necessary for the sperm-oocyte fusion process.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1375209254
Document Type :
Electronic Resource