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Deletion of a Seminal Gene Cluster Reinforces a Crucial Role of SVS2 in Male Fertility

Multiple genes, whose functions or expression are overlapping, compensate for the loss of one gene. A gene cluster in the mouse genome encodes five seminal vesicle proteins (SVS2, SVS3, SVS4, SVS5, and SVS6). These proteins are produced by male rodents and function in formation of the copulatory plu...

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Autores principales: Shindo, Miyuki, Inui, Masafumi, Kang, Woojin, Tamano, Moe, Tingwei, Cai, Takada, Shuji, Hibino, Taku, Yoshida, Manabu, Yoshida, Kaoru, Okada, Hiroshi, Iwamoto, Teruaki, Miyado, Kenji, Kawano, Natsuko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6769479/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31540031
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms20184557
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author Shindo, Miyuki
Inui, Masafumi
Kang, Woojin
Tamano, Moe
Tingwei, Cai
Takada, Shuji
Hibino, Taku
Yoshida, Manabu
Yoshida, Kaoru
Okada, Hiroshi
Iwamoto, Teruaki
Miyado, Kenji
Kawano, Natsuko
author_facet Shindo, Miyuki
Inui, Masafumi
Kang, Woojin
Tamano, Moe
Tingwei, Cai
Takada, Shuji
Hibino, Taku
Yoshida, Manabu
Yoshida, Kaoru
Okada, Hiroshi
Iwamoto, Teruaki
Miyado, Kenji
Kawano, Natsuko
author_sort Shindo, Miyuki
collection PubMed
description Multiple genes, whose functions or expression are overlapping, compensate for the loss of one gene. A gene cluster in the mouse genome encodes five seminal vesicle proteins (SVS2, SVS3, SVS4, SVS5, and SVS6). These proteins are produced by male rodents and function in formation of the copulatory plug following mating. SVS2 plays an essential role in the successful internal fertilization by protecting the sperm membrane against a uterine immune attack. We hypothesized that the four remaining seminal vesicle proteins (SVPs) of this gene cluster may partially/completely compensate for the deficiency of SVS2. For confirming our hypothesis, we generated mice lacking the entire SVP-encoding gene cluster and compared their fecundity with Svs2-deficient (Svs2(−/−)) mice; that is, mice deficient in Svs2 alone. A single loxP site remained after the deletion of the Svs2 gene. Therefore, we inserted another loxP site by combining the CRISPR/Cas9 system with single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides (ssODN). Male mice lacking the entire SVP-encoding gene cluster (Svs2–6(−/−) mice) and thereby all five SVP proteins, generated by the deletion of 100kbp genomic DNA, showed low fecundity. However, the fecundity level was comparable with that from Svs2(−/−) male mice. Our results demonstrate that SVS3, SVS4, SVS5, and SVS6 do not function in the protection of sperm against a uterine immune attack in the absence of SVS2. Thus, Svs2 is the critical gene in the SVP gene cluster.
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spelling pubmed-67694792019-10-30 Deletion of a Seminal Gene Cluster Reinforces a Crucial Role of SVS2 in Male Fertility Shindo, Miyuki Inui, Masafumi Kang, Woojin Tamano, Moe Tingwei, Cai Takada, Shuji Hibino, Taku Yoshida, Manabu Yoshida, Kaoru Okada, Hiroshi Iwamoto, Teruaki Miyado, Kenji Kawano, Natsuko Int J Mol Sci Article Multiple genes, whose functions or expression are overlapping, compensate for the loss of one gene. A gene cluster in the mouse genome encodes five seminal vesicle proteins (SVS2, SVS3, SVS4, SVS5, and SVS6). These proteins are produced by male rodents and function in formation of the copulatory plug following mating. SVS2 plays an essential role in the successful internal fertilization by protecting the sperm membrane against a uterine immune attack. We hypothesized that the four remaining seminal vesicle proteins (SVPs) of this gene cluster may partially/completely compensate for the deficiency of SVS2. For confirming our hypothesis, we generated mice lacking the entire SVP-encoding gene cluster and compared their fecundity with Svs2-deficient (Svs2(−/−)) mice; that is, mice deficient in Svs2 alone. A single loxP site remained after the deletion of the Svs2 gene. Therefore, we inserted another loxP site by combining the CRISPR/Cas9 system with single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides (ssODN). Male mice lacking the entire SVP-encoding gene cluster (Svs2–6(−/−) mice) and thereby all five SVP proteins, generated by the deletion of 100kbp genomic DNA, showed low fecundity. However, the fecundity level was comparable with that from Svs2(−/−) male mice. Our results demonstrate that SVS3, SVS4, SVS5, and SVS6 do not function in the protection of sperm against a uterine immune attack in the absence of SVS2. Thus, Svs2 is the critical gene in the SVP gene cluster. MDPI 2019-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6769479/ /pubmed/31540031 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms20184557 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Shindo, Miyuki
Inui, Masafumi
Kang, Woojin
Tamano, Moe
Tingwei, Cai
Takada, Shuji
Hibino, Taku
Yoshida, Manabu
Yoshida, Kaoru
Okada, Hiroshi
Iwamoto, Teruaki
Miyado, Kenji
Kawano, Natsuko
Deletion of a Seminal Gene Cluster Reinforces a Crucial Role of SVS2 in Male Fertility
title Deletion of a Seminal Gene Cluster Reinforces a Crucial Role of SVS2 in Male Fertility
title_full Deletion of a Seminal Gene Cluster Reinforces a Crucial Role of SVS2 in Male Fertility
title_fullStr Deletion of a Seminal Gene Cluster Reinforces a Crucial Role of SVS2 in Male Fertility
title_full_unstemmed Deletion of a Seminal Gene Cluster Reinforces a Crucial Role of SVS2 in Male Fertility
title_short Deletion of a Seminal Gene Cluster Reinforces a Crucial Role of SVS2 in Male Fertility
title_sort deletion of a seminal gene cluster reinforces a crucial role of svs2 in male fertility
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6769479/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31540031
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms20184557
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