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Thioredoxin-dependent disulfide bond reduction is required for protamine eviction from sperm chromatin

Authors :
Dmitry V. Fyodorov
Alexander Emelyanov
Source :
Genes & Development. 30:2651-2656
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2016.

Abstract

Cysteine oxidation in protamines leads to their oligomerization and contributes to sperm chromatin compaction. Here we identify the Drosophila thioredoxin Deadhead (DHD) as the factor responsible for the reduction of intermolecular disulfide bonds in protamines and their eviction from sperm during fertilization. Protamine chaperone TAP/p32 dissociates DNA–protamine complexes in vitro only when protamine oligomers are first converted to monomers by DHD. dhd-null embryos cannot decondense sperm chromatin and terminate development after the first pronuclear division. Therefore, the thioredoxin DHD plays a critical role in early development to facilitate the switch from protamine-based sperm chromatin structures to the somatic nucleosomal chromatin.

Details

ISSN :
15495477 and 08909369
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genes & Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eb35dbcc32ac90c8fa098cf2890c0d5f