Abstract
Among several candidate Ca2+ entry channels in sperm, only CatSper1 and CatSper2 are known to have required roles in male fertility. Past work with CatSper1 null sperm indicates that a critical lesion in hyperactivated motility underlies the infertility phenotype and is associated with an absence of depolarization-evoked Ca2+ entry. Here we show that failure of hyperactivation of CatSper2 null sperm similarly correlates with an absence of depolarization-evoked Ca2+ entry. Additional shared aspects of the phenotypes of CatSper1 and -2 null sperm include unperturbed regional distributions of conventional voltage-gated Ca2+ channel proteins and robust acceleration of the flagellar beat by bicarbonate. Further study reveals that treatment of both wild-type and CatSper2 null sperm with procaine increases beat asymmetry, a characteristic of the flagellar waveform of hyperactivation. This partial rescue of the loss-of-hyperactivation phenotype suggests that an absence of CatSper2 precludes hyperactivation by preventing delivery of needed Ca2+ messenger rather than by preventing flagellar responses to Ca2+. CatSper2 null sperm also have an increased basal cAMP content and beat frequency. Protein kinase A inhibitor H89 lowers beat frequency to that of wild-type sperm, suggesting that CatSper2 is required for protein kinase A-mediated, tonic control of resting cAMP content. Relative to wild-type testis, CatSper1 and -2 null testes contain normal amounts of CatSper2 and -1 transcripts, respectively. However, CatSper1 null sperm lack CatSper2 protein and CatSper2 null sperm lack CatSper1 protein. Hence, stable expression of CatSper1 protein requires CatSper2 and vice versa. This co-dependent expression dictates identical loss-of-function sperm phenotypes for CatSperl and -2 null mutants. © 2005 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Carlson, A. E., Quill, T. A., Westenbroek, R. E., Schuh, S. M., Hille, B., & Babcock, D. F. (2005). Identical phenotypes of CatSper1 and CatSper2 null sperm. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 280(37), 32238–32244. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M501430200
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