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Título
The PSMA8 subunit of the spermatoproteasome is essential for proper meiotic exit and mouse fertility
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Meiotic prophase
Spermatogenesis
Proteasomes
Protein extraction
Clasificación UNESCO
2415 Biología Molecular
Fecha de publicación
2019
Editor
Public Library of Science (New York)
Citación
Gómez-H L, Felipe-Medina N, Condezo YB, Garcia-Valiente R, Ramos I, Suja JA, et al. (2019) The PSMA8 subunit of the spermatoproteasome is essential for proper meiotic exit and mouse fertility. PLoS Genet 15(8): e1008316. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008316
Resumen
[EN]The ubiquitin proteasome system regulates meiotic recombination in yeast through its association
with the synaptonemal complex, a ‘zipper’-like structure that holds homologous chromosome
pairs in synapsis during meiotic prophase I. In mammals, the proteasome activator
subunit PA200 targets acetylated histones for degradation during somatic DNA double
strand break repair and during histone replacement during spermiogenesis. We investigated
the role of the testis-specific proteasomal subunit α4s (PSMA8) during spermatogenesis,
and found that PSMA8 was localized to and dependent on the central region of the synaptonemal
complex. Accordingly, synapsis-deficient mice show delocalization of PSMA8. Moreover,
though Psma8-deficient mice are proficient in meiotic homologous recombination,
there are alterations in the proteostasis of several key meiotic players that, in addition to the
known substrate acetylated histones, have been shown by a proteomic approach to interact
with PSMA8, such as SYCP3, SYCP1, CDK1 and TRIP13. These alterations lead to an
accumulation of spermatocytes in metaphase I and II which either enter massively into apoptosis
or give rise to a low number of aberrant round spermatids that apoptose before histone
replacement takes place.
URI
DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1008316
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