Spermatozoa are functionally inert when they emerge from the testes. Functional competence is conferred upon these cells during a post-testicular phase of sperm maturation in the epididymis. Remarkably, this functional transformation of epididymal spermatozoa occurs in the absence of nuclear gene transcription or protein translation. To understand the cellular mechanisms underpinning epididymal maturation, we have performed a label-free, MS-based, comparative quantification of peptides from caput, corpus and caudal epididymal spermatozoa. In total, 68 phosphopeptide changes could be detected during epididymal maturation corresponding to the identification of 22 modified proteins. Included in this list are the sodium-bicarbonate cotransporter, the sperm specific serine kinase 1, AKAP4 and protein kinase A regulatory subunit. Furthermore, four phosphopeptide changes came from Izumo1, the sperm-egg fusion protein, in the cytoplasmic segment of the protein. 2D-PAGE confirmed that Izumo1 is post-translationally modified during epididymal transit. Interestingly, phosphorylation on Izumo1 was detected on residue S339 in the caput and corpus but not caudal cells. Furthermore, Izumo1 exhibited four phosphorylated residues when spermatozoa reached the cauda, which were absent from caput cells. A model is advanced suggesting that these phospho-regulations are likely to act as a scaffold for the association of adaptor proteins with Izumo1 as these cells prepare for fertilization.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/pr300468mDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

phosphopeptide changes
12
functional competence
8
epididymal spermatozoa
8
epididymal maturation
8
caput corpus
8
corpus caudal
8
izumo1
6
spermatozoa
5
epididymal
5
analysis phosphopeptide
4

Similar Publications

Background: This study was to elucidate the impact of blast-induced neurotrauma (BINT) on phosphoproteome networks and cognition in a genetically heterogeneous population of mice (rTg4510) with the human tau P301L mutation linked to Alzheimer's disease-related dementia (ADRD) including frontotemporal dementia.

Method: Mild traumatic brain injury was induced in rTg4510 mice exposed to a single low-density blast (LIB) at an upright position. After assessment of cognitive function by the automated-Home Cage Monitoring (aHCM) system, frontal cortex tissue was collected at 40 days post-injury.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The ataxia-telangiectasia disease protein ATM controls vesicular protein secretion via CHGA and microtubule dynamics via CRMP5.

Neurobiol Dis

December 2024

Goethe University Frankfurt, University Hospital, Clinic of Neurology, Exp. Neurology, Heinrich Hoffmann Str. 7, 60590 Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Electronic address:

The autosomal recessive disease ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) presents with cerebellar degeneration, immunodeficiency, radiosensitivity, capillary dilatations, and pulmonary infections. Most symptoms outside the nervous system can be explained by failures of the disease protein ATM as a Ser/Thr-kinase to coordinate DNA damage repair. However, ATM in adult neurons has cytoplasmic localization and vesicle association, where its roles remain unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tandem HILIC-IMAC strategy for simultaneous N-glycoproteomics and phosphoproteomics in aging mouse brain.

J Chromatogr A

January 2025

Key Laboratory of Phytochemistry and Natural Medicines. Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Dalian, 116023, PR China; Ganjiang Chinese Medicine Innovation Center, Nanchang, 330000, PR China.

Article Synopsis
  • Abnormal glycosylation and phosphorylation are linked to brain aging, with their interactions influencing pathological processes, yet prior studies rarely examined both simultaneously.
  • A new tandem HILIC-IMAC method was developed to analyze N-glycosylation and phosphorylation in mouse brains from two different ages, revealing a wealth of data including nearly 11,000 glycopeptides and phosphopeptides.
  • Results indicated that aging affected glycoproteins related to cell adhesion and extracellular matrix, while phosphoproteins influenced microtubule dynamics and synaptic transmission, showing opposing expression trends in glycosylation and phosphorylation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fluorescence polarization (FP) is a reliable and straightforward mix-and-read assay to quantify the interaction of a protein-peptide pair. Labeling the peptide with a suitable fluorophore enables the distinction between the protein-bound and protein-unbound states of a peptide by a change in the emitted light's polarization. Hereby, we present the method to establish the binding affinity for FOXO3a phosphopeptide with 14-3-3ɛ protein using FP.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

PhosX: data-driven kinase activity inference from phosphoproteomics experiments.

Bioinformatics

November 2024

European Bioinformatics Institute, European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton CB10 1SD, United Kingdom.

Summary: The inference of kinase activity from phosphoproteomics data can point to causal mechanisms driving signalling processes and potential drug targets. Identifying the kinases whose change in activity explains the observed phosphorylation profiles, however, remains challenging, and constrained by the manually curated knowledge of kinase-substrate associations. Recently, experimentally determined substrate sequence specificities of human kinases have become available, but robust methods to exploit this new data for kinase activity inference are still missing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!