Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10748286 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2016 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Ca2+ plays a central role in the regulation of sperm motility. We recently reported an unexpected role of CNNM4, a Mg2+ transporter, in this process by demonstrating perturbed Ca2+ influx and gradual loss of motility of Cnnm4-deficient sperm. However, Cnnm4-deficient male mice were not entirely infertile, and a significant Ca2+ response was still observed in their sperm. In the present study, we generated Cnnm4-deficient mice harboring a non-functional Cnnm2 allele (Cnnm2Î), to examine whether CNNM2 compensates for the lost function of CNNM4 in sperm. Cnnm2+/Î; Cnnm4Î/Î mice were infertile, and no obvious histological abnormalities were noted in their testis and epididymis. Their sperm showed normal morphology, but became immotile much more rapidly than those from Cnnm4Î/Î mice. When capacitation was initiated using serum albumin application, a rapid increase of intracellular Ca2+ levels was observed in most wild-type sperm, but only about half of sperm from Cnnm4Î/Î mice exhibited a Ca2+ response, and the response rate was further reduced in sperm from Cnnm2+/Î; Cnnm4Î/Î mice. Thus, sperm motility and Ca2+ response were more severely affected in sperm from Cnnm2+/Î; Cnnm4Î/Î mice than in those from Cnnm4Î/Î mice, implicating CNNM2 in regulating these processes.
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Biochemistry
Authors
Daisuke Yamazaki, Yosuke Funato, Haruhiko Miyata, Masahito Ikawa, Hiroaki Miki,