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Binding of sperm protein Izumo1 and its egg receptor Juno drives Cd9 accumulation in the intercellular contact area prior to fusion during mammalian fertilization
Author(s) -
Myriam Chalbi,
Virginie BarraudLange,
Benjamin Ravaux,
Kévin Howan,
Nicolás Rodríguez,
Pierre Soule,
Arnaud Ndzoudi,
Claude Boucheix,
Eric Rubinstein,
Jean Philippe Wolf,
Ahmed Ziyyat,
Éric Perez,
Frédéric Pincet,
Christine Gourier
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.754
H-Index - 325
eISSN - 1477-9129
pISSN - 0950-1991
DOI - 10.1242/dev.111534
Subject(s) - biology , gamete , microbiology and biotechnology , adhesion , lipid bilayer fusion , sperm , human fertilization , fusion protein , intracellular , receptor , membrane , anatomy , biochemistry , genetics , recombinant dna , gene , chemistry , organic chemistry
Little is known about the molecular mechanisms that induce gamete fusion during mammalian fertilization. After initial contact, adhesion between gametes only leads to fusion in the presence of three membrane proteins that are necessary, but insufficient, for fusion: Izumo1 on sperm, its receptor Juno on egg and Cd9 on egg. What happens during this adhesion phase is a crucial issue. Here, we demonstrate that the intercellular adhesion that Izumo1 creates with Juno is conserved in mouse and human eggs. We show that, along with Izumo1, egg Cd9 concomitantly accumulates in the adhesion area. Without egg Cd9, the recruitment kinetics of Izumo1 are accelerated. Our results suggest that this process is conserved across species, as the adhesion partners, Izumo1 and its receptor, are interchangeable between mouse and human. Our findings suggest that Cd9 is a partner of Juno, and these discoveries allow us to propose a new model of the molecular mechanisms leading to gamete fusion, in which the adhesion-induced membrane organization assembles all key players of the fusion machinery.

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