Sialylation of Asparagine 612 Inhibits Aconitase Activity during Mouse Sperm Capacitation; a Possible Mechanism for the Switch from Oxidative Phosphorylation to Glycolysis
Following ejaculation, sperm undergo a series of post-translational modifications that enable the cell to find and fertilize and egg; a process known as capacitation. Here we show that the mitochondrial enzyme Aconitase becomes sialylated during capacitation. Consequently, this inhibits Aconitase ac...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular & cellular proteomics 2020-11, Vol.19 (11), p.1860-1875 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Following ejaculation, sperm undergo a series of post-translational modifications that enable the cell to find and fertilize and egg; a process known as capacitation. Here we show that the mitochondrial enzyme Aconitase becomes sialylated during capacitation. Consequently, this inhibits Aconitase activity. This may be a mechanism by which sperm switch from an oxidative to glycolytic dependent cell.
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Highlights
•During sperm capacitation, 6 proteins become de-silyated, whilst one becomes silyated.•Loss of sialylated from Endothelial lipase results in reduction of activity.•Silyation of N612 on Aconitase causes loss of activity.•Silyation of Aconitase may explain the switch from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis during capacitation.
After ejaculation, mammalian spermatozoa must undergo a process known as capacitation in order to successfully fertilize the oocyte. Several post-translational modifications occur during capacitation, including sialylation, which despite being limited to a few proteins, seems to be essential for proper sperm-oocyte interaction. Regardless of its importance, to date, no single study has ever identified nor quantified which glycoproteins bearing terminal sialic acid (Sia) are altered during capacitation. Here we characterize sialylation during mouse sperm capacitation. Using tandem MS coupled with liquid chromatography (LC–MS/MS), we found 142 nonreductant peptides, with 9 of them showing potential modifications on their sialylated oligosaccharides during capacitation. As such, N-linked sialoglycopeptides from C4b-binding protein, endothelial lipase (EL), serine proteases 39 and 52, testis-expressed protein 101 and zonadhesin were reduced following capacitation. In contrast, mitochondrial aconitate hydratase (aconitase; ACO2), a TCA cycle enzyme, was the only protein to show an increase in Sia content during capacitation. Interestingly, although the loss of Sia within EL (N62) was accompanied by a reduction in its phospholipase A1 activity, a decrease in the activity of ACO2 (i.e. stereospecific isomerization of citrate to isocitrate) occurred when sialylation increased (N612). The latter was confirmed by N612D recombinant protein tagged with both His and GFP. The replacement of Sia for the negatively charged Aspartic acid in the N612D mutant caused complete loss of aconitase activity compared with the WT. Computer modeling show that N612 sits atop the catalytic site of ACO2. The introduction of Sia causes a |
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ISSN: | 1535-9476 1535-9484 |
DOI: | 10.1074/mcp.RA120.002109 |