Oligo‐astheno‐teratozoospermia in mice lacking ORP4, a sterol‐binding protein in the OSBP‐related protein family

Oligo‐astheno‐teratozoospermia (OAT), a condition that includes low sperm number, low sperm motility and abnormal sperm morphology, is the commonest cause of male infertility. Because genetic analysis is frequently impeded by the infertility phenotype, the genetic basis of many of OAT conditions has...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Genes to cells : devoted to molecular & cellular mechanisms 2014-01, Vol.19 (1), p.13-27
Hauptverfasser: Udagawa, Osamu, Ito, Chizuru, Ogonuki, Narumi, Sato, Hiroyasu, Lee, Shoken, Tripvanuntakul, Pearlta, Ichi, Ikuyo, Uchida, Yasunori, Nishimura, Taki, Murakami, Makoto, Ogura, Atsuo, Inoue, Takao, Toshimori, Kiyotaka, Arai, Hiroyuki
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Oligo‐astheno‐teratozoospermia (OAT), a condition that includes low sperm number, low sperm motility and abnormal sperm morphology, is the commonest cause of male infertility. Because genetic analysis is frequently impeded by the infertility phenotype, the genetic basis of many of OAT conditions has been hard to verify. Here, we show that deficiency of ORP4, a sterol‐binding protein in the oxysterol‐binding protein (OSBP)‐related protein family, causes male infertility due to severe OAT in mice. In ORP4‐deficient mice, spermatogonia proliferation and subsequent meiosis occurred normally, but the morphology of elongating and elongated spermatids was severely distorted, with round‐shaped head, curled back head or symplast. Spermatozoa derived from ORP4‐deficient mice had little or no motility and no fertilizing ability in vitro. In ORP4‐deficient testis, postmeiotic spermatids underwent extensive apoptosis, leading to a severely reduced number of spermatozoa. At the ultrastructural level, nascent acrosomes appeared to normally develop in round spermatids, but acrosomes were detached from the nucleus in elongating spermatids. These results suggest that ORP4 is essential for the postmeiotic differentiation of germ cells.
ISSN:1356-9597
1365-2443
DOI:10.1111/gtc.12105