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Rapamycin-mediated mTOR inhibition impairs silencing of sex chromosomes and the pachytene piRNA pathway in the mouse testis
Author(s) -
Zhi-Ping Zhu,
Qiuling Yue,
Jie Xie,
Shuya Zhang,
Wenxiu He,
Shun Bai,
Suwen Tian,
Yingwen Zhang,
Mengneng Xiong,
Zheng Sun,
Chaoyang Huang,
Yuebei Li,
Ke Zheng,
Lan Ye
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.101740
Subject(s) - pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , biology , piwi interacting rna , spermatogenesis , gene silencing , mechanistic target of rapamycin , germ cell , meiosis , regulator , microbiology and biotechnology , sperm , medicine , cancer research , endocrinology , gene , genetics , rna , signal transduction , rna interference
Mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) controls cell growth and metabolism in response to environmental and metabolic signals. Rapamycin robustly extends the lifespan in mammals and has clinical relevance in organ transplantation and cancer therapy but side effects include male infertility. Here, we report that chronic rapamycin treatment causes spermatogenic arrest in adult male mice due to defects in sex body formation and meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). Many sex chromosome-linked genes were up-regulated in isolated pachytene spermatocytes from rapamycin-treated mice. RNA-Seq analysis also identified mRNAs encoding the core piRNA pathway components were decreased. Furthermore, rapamycin treatment was associated with a drastic reduction in pachytene piRNA populations. The inhibitory effects of rapamycin on spermatogenesis were partially reversible, with restoration of testis mass and sperm motility within 2 months of treatment cessation. Collectively, we have defined an essential role of mTOR in MSCI and identified a novel function as a regulator of small RNA homeostasis in male germ cells.

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