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Excision of Trpv6 Gene Leads to Severe Defects in Epididymal Ca2+ Absorption and Male Fertility Much Like Single D541A Pore Mutation*
- Publication Year :
- 2012
- Publisher :
- American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2012.
-
Abstract
- Replacement of aspartate residue 541 by alanine (D541A) in the pore of TRPV6 channels in mice disrupts Ca(2+) absorption by the epididymal epithelium, resulting in abnormally high Ca(2+) concentrations in epididymal luminal fluid and in a dramatic but incomplete loss of sperm motility and fertilization capacity, raising the possibility of residual activity of channels formed by TRPV6(D541A) proteins (Weissgerber, P., Kriebs, U., Tsvilovskyy, V., Olausson, J., Kretz, O., Stoerger, C., Vennekens, R., Wissenbach, U., Middendorff, R., Flockerzi, V., and Freichel, M. (2011) Sci. Signal. 4, ra27). It is known from other cation channels that introducing pore mutations even if they largely affect their conductivity and permeability can evoke considerably different phenotypes compared with the deletion of the corresponding protein. Therefore, we generated TRPV6-deficient mice (Trpv6(-/-)) by deleting exons encoding transmembrane domains with the pore-forming region and the complete cytosolic C terminus harboring binding sites for TRPV6-associated proteins that regulate its activity and plasma membrane anchoring. Using this strategy, we aimed to determine whether the TRPV6(D541A) pore mutant still contributes to residual channel activity and/or channel-independent functions in vivo. Trpv6(-/-) males reveal severe defects in fertility and motility and viability of sperm and a significant increase in epididymal luminal Ca(2+) concentration that is mirrored by a lack of Ca(2+) uptake by the epididymal epithelium. Therewith, Trpv6 excision affects epididymal Ca(2+) handling and male fertility to the same extent as the introduction of the D541A pore mutation, arguing against residual functions of the TRPV6(D541A) pore mutant in epididymal epithelial cells.
- Subjects :
- Male
Mutant
Motility
TRPV Cation Channels
Biology
Biochemistry
Transient receptor potential channel
Mice
medicine
Animals
Molecular Biology
Sperm motility
Calcium signaling
DNA Primers
Epididymis
Mice, Knockout
Base Sequence
Cell Biology
Sperm
Molecular biology
Transmembrane domain
medicine.anatomical_structure
Fertility
Mutation
Sperm Motility
Calcium
Female
Calcium Channels
Gene Deletion
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....95590c31f9bdaf0ebaf76555fdb7d81b