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Identification of TEX101-associated Proteins Through Proteomic Measurement of Human Spermatozoa Homozygous for the Missense Variant rs35033974

TEX101 is a germ-cell-specific protein and a validated biomarker of male infertility. Mouse TEX101 was found essential for male fertility and was suggested to function as a cell surface chaperone involved in maturation of proteins required for sperm migration and sperm–oocyte interaction. However, t...

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Autores principales: Schiza, Christina, Korbakis, Dimitrios, Jarvi, Keith, Diamandis, Eleftherios P., Drabovich, Andrei P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6356071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30429210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA118.001170
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author Schiza, Christina
Korbakis, Dimitrios
Jarvi, Keith
Diamandis, Eleftherios P.
Drabovich, Andrei P.
author_facet Schiza, Christina
Korbakis, Dimitrios
Jarvi, Keith
Diamandis, Eleftherios P.
Drabovich, Andrei P.
author_sort Schiza, Christina
collection PubMed
description TEX101 is a germ-cell-specific protein and a validated biomarker of male infertility. Mouse TEX101 was found essential for male fertility and was suggested to function as a cell surface chaperone involved in maturation of proteins required for sperm migration and sperm–oocyte interaction. However, the precise functional role of human TEX101 is not known and cannot be studied in vitro due to the lack of human germ cell lines. Here, we genotyped 386 men for a common missense variant rs35033974 of TEX101 and identified 52 heterozygous and 4 homozygous men. We then discovered by targeted proteomics that the variant allele rs35033974 was associated with the near-complete degradation (>97%) of the corresponding G99V TEX101 form and suggested that spermatozoa of homozygous men could serve as a knockdown model to study TEX101 function in humans. Differential proteomic profiling with label-free quantification measured 8,046 proteins in spermatozoa of eight men and identified eight cell-surface and nine secreted testis-specific proteins significantly down-regulated in four patients homozygous for rs35033974. Substantially reduced levels of testis-specific cell-surface proteins potentially involved in sperm migration and sperm–oocyte interaction (including LY6K and ADAM29) were confirmed by targeted proteomics and Western blotting assays. Because recent population-scale genomic data revealed homozygous fathers with biological children, rs35033974 is not a monogenic factor of male infertility in humans. However, median TEX101 levels in seminal plasma were found fivefold lower (p = 0.0005) in heterozygous than in wild-type men of European ancestry. We conclude that spermatozoa of rs35033974 homozygous men have substantially reduced levels of TEX101 and could be used as a model to elucidate the precise TEX101 function, which will advance biology of human reproduction.
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spelling pubmed-63560712019-02-04 Identification of TEX101-associated Proteins Through Proteomic Measurement of Human Spermatozoa Homozygous for the Missense Variant rs35033974 Schiza, Christina Korbakis, Dimitrios Jarvi, Keith Diamandis, Eleftherios P. Drabovich, Andrei P. Mol Cell Proteomics Research TEX101 is a germ-cell-specific protein and a validated biomarker of male infertility. Mouse TEX101 was found essential for male fertility and was suggested to function as a cell surface chaperone involved in maturation of proteins required for sperm migration and sperm–oocyte interaction. However, the precise functional role of human TEX101 is not known and cannot be studied in vitro due to the lack of human germ cell lines. Here, we genotyped 386 men for a common missense variant rs35033974 of TEX101 and identified 52 heterozygous and 4 homozygous men. We then discovered by targeted proteomics that the variant allele rs35033974 was associated with the near-complete degradation (>97%) of the corresponding G99V TEX101 form and suggested that spermatozoa of homozygous men could serve as a knockdown model to study TEX101 function in humans. Differential proteomic profiling with label-free quantification measured 8,046 proteins in spermatozoa of eight men and identified eight cell-surface and nine secreted testis-specific proteins significantly down-regulated in four patients homozygous for rs35033974. Substantially reduced levels of testis-specific cell-surface proteins potentially involved in sperm migration and sperm–oocyte interaction (including LY6K and ADAM29) were confirmed by targeted proteomics and Western blotting assays. Because recent population-scale genomic data revealed homozygous fathers with biological children, rs35033974 is not a monogenic factor of male infertility in humans. However, median TEX101 levels in seminal plasma were found fivefold lower (p = 0.0005) in heterozygous than in wild-type men of European ancestry. We conclude that spermatozoa of rs35033974 homozygous men have substantially reduced levels of TEX101 and could be used as a model to elucidate the precise TEX101 function, which will advance biology of human reproduction. The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2019-02 2018-11-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6356071/ /pubmed/30429210 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA118.001170 Text en © 2019 Schiza et al. Published by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version open access under the terms of the Creative Commons CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) .
spellingShingle Research
Schiza, Christina
Korbakis, Dimitrios
Jarvi, Keith
Diamandis, Eleftherios P.
Drabovich, Andrei P.
Identification of TEX101-associated Proteins Through Proteomic Measurement of Human Spermatozoa Homozygous for the Missense Variant rs35033974
title Identification of TEX101-associated Proteins Through Proteomic Measurement of Human Spermatozoa Homozygous for the Missense Variant rs35033974
title_full Identification of TEX101-associated Proteins Through Proteomic Measurement of Human Spermatozoa Homozygous for the Missense Variant rs35033974
title_fullStr Identification of TEX101-associated Proteins Through Proteomic Measurement of Human Spermatozoa Homozygous for the Missense Variant rs35033974
title_full_unstemmed Identification of TEX101-associated Proteins Through Proteomic Measurement of Human Spermatozoa Homozygous for the Missense Variant rs35033974
title_short Identification of TEX101-associated Proteins Through Proteomic Measurement of Human Spermatozoa Homozygous for the Missense Variant rs35033974
title_sort identification of tex101-associated proteins through proteomic measurement of human spermatozoa homozygous for the missense variant rs35033974
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6356071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30429210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA118.001170
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