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Putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones

BACKGROUND: The putative regulatory role of the male reproductive hormones in the molecular mechanism underlying chromatin condensation remains poorly understood. In the past decade, we developed two adult male rat models wherein functional deficits of testosterone or FSH, produced after treatments...

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Autores principales: Gill-Sharma, Manjeet Kaur, Choudhuri, Jyoti, Ansari, Mukhtar Aleem, D’Souza, Serena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3549752/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23241214
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1868-7083-4-23
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author Gill-Sharma, Manjeet Kaur
Choudhuri, Jyoti
Ansari, Mukhtar Aleem
D’Souza, Serena
author_facet Gill-Sharma, Manjeet Kaur
Choudhuri, Jyoti
Ansari, Mukhtar Aleem
D’Souza, Serena
author_sort Gill-Sharma, Manjeet Kaur
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The putative regulatory role of the male reproductive hormones in the molecular mechanism underlying chromatin condensation remains poorly understood. In the past decade, we developed two adult male rat models wherein functional deficits of testosterone or FSH, produced after treatments with 20 mg/Kg/d of cyproterone acetate (CPA) per os, for a period of 15 days or 3 mg/Kg/d of fluphenazine decanoate (FD) subcutaneously, for a period of 60 days, respectively, affected the rate of sperm chromatin decondensation in vitro. These rat models have been used in the current study in order to delineate the putative roles of testosterone and FSH in the molecular mechanism underlying remodelling of sperm chromatin. RESULTS: We report that deficits of both testosterone and FSH affected the turnover of polyubiquitylated histones and led to their accumulation in the testis. Functional deficits of testosterone reduced expression of MIWI, the 5-methyl cap binding RNA-binding protein (PIWIlike murine homologue of the Drosophila protein PIWI/P-element induced wimpy testis) containing a PAZ/Piwi-Argonaut-Zwille domain and levels of histone deacetylase1 (HDAC1), ubiquitin ligating enzyme (URE-B1/E3), 20S proteasome α1 concomitant with reduced expression of ubiquitin activating enzyme (ube1), conjugating enzyme (ube2d2), chromodomain Y like protein (cdyl), bromodomain testis specific protein (brdt), hdac6 (histone deacetylase6), androgen-dependent homeobox placentae embryonic protein (pem/RhoX5), histones h2b and th3 (testis-specific h3). Functional deficits of FSH reduced the expression of cdyl and brdt genes in the testis, affected turnover of ubiquitylated histones, stalled the physiological DNA repair mechanism and culminated in spermiation of DNA damaged sperm. CONCLUSIONS: We aver that deficits of both testosterone and FSH differentially affected the process of sperm chromatin remodelling through subtle changes in the ‘chromatin condensation transcriptome and proteome’, thereby stalling the replacement of ‘dynamic’ histones with ‘inert’ protamines, and altering the epigenetic state of condensed sperm chromatin. The inappropriately condensed chromatin affected the sperm chromatin cytoarchitecture, evident from subtle ultrastructural changes in the nuclei of immature caput epididymal sperm of CPA- or FD-treated rats, incubated in vitro with dithiothreitol.
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spelling pubmed-35497522013-01-23 Putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones Gill-Sharma, Manjeet Kaur Choudhuri, Jyoti Ansari, Mukhtar Aleem D’Souza, Serena Clin Epigenetics Research BACKGROUND: The putative regulatory role of the male reproductive hormones in the molecular mechanism underlying chromatin condensation remains poorly understood. In the past decade, we developed two adult male rat models wherein functional deficits of testosterone or FSH, produced after treatments with 20 mg/Kg/d of cyproterone acetate (CPA) per os, for a period of 15 days or 3 mg/Kg/d of fluphenazine decanoate (FD) subcutaneously, for a period of 60 days, respectively, affected the rate of sperm chromatin decondensation in vitro. These rat models have been used in the current study in order to delineate the putative roles of testosterone and FSH in the molecular mechanism underlying remodelling of sperm chromatin. RESULTS: We report that deficits of both testosterone and FSH affected the turnover of polyubiquitylated histones and led to their accumulation in the testis. Functional deficits of testosterone reduced expression of MIWI, the 5-methyl cap binding RNA-binding protein (PIWIlike murine homologue of the Drosophila protein PIWI/P-element induced wimpy testis) containing a PAZ/Piwi-Argonaut-Zwille domain and levels of histone deacetylase1 (HDAC1), ubiquitin ligating enzyme (URE-B1/E3), 20S proteasome α1 concomitant with reduced expression of ubiquitin activating enzyme (ube1), conjugating enzyme (ube2d2), chromodomain Y like protein (cdyl), bromodomain testis specific protein (brdt), hdac6 (histone deacetylase6), androgen-dependent homeobox placentae embryonic protein (pem/RhoX5), histones h2b and th3 (testis-specific h3). Functional deficits of FSH reduced the expression of cdyl and brdt genes in the testis, affected turnover of ubiquitylated histones, stalled the physiological DNA repair mechanism and culminated in spermiation of DNA damaged sperm. CONCLUSIONS: We aver that deficits of both testosterone and FSH differentially affected the process of sperm chromatin remodelling through subtle changes in the ‘chromatin condensation transcriptome and proteome’, thereby stalling the replacement of ‘dynamic’ histones with ‘inert’ protamines, and altering the epigenetic state of condensed sperm chromatin. The inappropriately condensed chromatin affected the sperm chromatin cytoarchitecture, evident from subtle ultrastructural changes in the nuclei of immature caput epididymal sperm of CPA- or FD-treated rats, incubated in vitro with dithiothreitol. BioMed Central 2012-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3549752/ /pubmed/23241214 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1868-7083-4-23 Text en Copyright ©2013 Gill-Sharma et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Gill-Sharma, Manjeet Kaur
Choudhuri, Jyoti
Ansari, Mukhtar Aleem
D’Souza, Serena
Putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones
title Putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones
title_full Putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones
title_fullStr Putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones
title_full_unstemmed Putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones
title_short Putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones
title_sort putative molecular mechanism underlying sperm chromatin remodelling is regulated by reproductive hormones
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3549752/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23241214
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1868-7083-4-23
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