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Absence of tektin 4 causes asthenozoospermia and subfertility in male mice
Author(s) -
Roy Angshumoy,
Lin Yi-Nan,
Agno Julio E.,
DeMayo Francesco J.,
Matzuk Martin M.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fj.06-7035com
Subject(s) - flagellum , biology , sperm , asthenozoospermia , microbiology and biotechnology , sperm motility , motility , axoneme , genetics , gene , male infertility , infertility , pregnancy
Sperm flagellar motion is the outcome of a dynamic interplay between the axonemal cytoskel‐eton, the peri‐axonemal accessory structures, and multiple regulatory networks that coordinate to produce flagellar beat and waveform. Tektins are conserved components of the flagellar proteome in evolutionarily diverse species and are believed to play essential roles in the mechanics of sperm motility. Using database mining, we identified multiple new paralogs of previously annotated tektins, including tektin 4 (TEKT4), which shares 77.1% identity with its nearest human homologue. Mouse Tekt4 is a germ cell‐enriched gene, most abundantly expressed in haploid round sperma‐tids in the testis, and the protein is localized to the sperm flagella. Male mice lacking TEKT4 on a 129S5/ SvEvBrd inbred background are subfertile. Tekt4 ‐null sperm exhibit drastically reduced forward progressive velocity and uncoordinated waveform propagation along the flagellum. In Tekt4 ‐null sperm, flagellar ultra‐structure is grossly unaltered as revealed by transmission electron microscopy. However, the ineffective flagellar strokes lead to ~10‐fold higher consumption of intracellular ATP in Tekt4 ‐null sperm as compared to wild‐type, and null spermatozoa rapidly lose progressive motility when incubated for ≥1.5 h. Our studies demonstrate that TEKT4 is necessary for the proper coordinated beating of the sperm flagellum and male reproductive physiology.—Roy, A., Lin, Y.‐N., Agno, J. E., DeMayo, F. J., Matzuk, M. M. Absence of tektin 4 causes asthenozoospermia and subfertility in male mice. FASEB J. 21, 1013–1025 (2007)

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