Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10767189 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The mechanism of maternal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) inheritance in animals can be said to be the selective elimination of sperm mtDNA via the elimination factor of the egg and a sperm mitochondria-specific factor. In 2005, we clarified that t-tpis (Spag1 isoform 1) is a mitochondria-specific translocator and the sperm factor, and furthermore estimated that the elimination factors of the egg are the divalent cation-dependent endonuclease and s-tpis (Spag1 isoform 2 and isoform 3) as the elimination system-specific chaperone [K. Hayashida, K. Omagari, J. Masuda, H. Hazama, Y. Kadokawa, K. Ohba, S. Kohno, The sperm mitochondria-specific translocator has a key role in maternal mitochondrial inheritance, Cell Biol. Int. 29 (2005) 472-481]. This time, using a recombinant Spag1 isoform 1 protein, a pull-down assay of ovary cytosol was performed and the elimination factors searched for. Surprisingly, an endogenous retroviral integrase fragment (Eri15) was identified using mass spectrometry of the electrophoresis band of the pull-down protein. Eri15 was detected as a complex of â¼500Â kDa with Spag1 isoform 2 or isoform 3 in native PAGE of the ovary cytosol. This strongly suggested that Eri15 is selectively transported into the sperm mitochondria matrix by Spag1 isoform 2 and 3 via Spag1 isoform 1 and that sperm mtDNA is destroyed, thus causing the establishment of maternal mtDNA inheritance.
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Authors
Kenji Hayashida, Katsuhisa Omagari, Jun-ichi Masuda, Shigeru Kohno,