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Query: UNIPROT:P56851 (
epididymal
)
11,273
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The distribution of protein gene product 9.5 (PGP) and
ubiquitin
in the spermatozoa and epithelial cells in the different regions of the rat ductus epididymidis (proximal caput, distal caput, corpus and cauda) was studied by Western blotting analyses and electron microscopical immunogold labelling. Western blotting analyses showed that the PGP immunoreactive band was very intense in the caput and cauda epididymidis and almost irrelevant in the corpus, while the
ubiquitin
immunoreactive band was intense in the distal caput and cauda. No
ubiquitin
immunoreactive band was observed in the proximal caput and only a very weak band was seen in the corpus. The results of electron microscopical immunogold labelling varied from one
epididymal
region to another. The proximal caput epididymidis presented immunoreaction to PGP in the rough endoplasmic reticulum, cytosol, mitochondria and microvilli of most principal cells, and in the cytosol, rough endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria of most basal cells. No
ubiquitin
immunoreaction was observed in this
epididymal
region. In the distal caput epididymidis, PGP immunoreactivity was detected in some principal and basal cells in the same intracellular locations as described in the proximal caput. In this region,
ubiquitin
immunoreactivity appears in the apical cytosol and mitochondria of principal cells. The corpus epididymidis showed no immunoreaction to PGP or
ubiquitin
. In the cauda epididymidis, immunostaining to PGP was observed in most clear cells and in isolated principal cells. The intracellular location of PGP in both cell types was the cytosol, mitochondria and microvilli. Ubiquitin immunoreactivity was detected in the perinuclear cytosol and mitochondria-but not in the digestive vacuoles-of some clear cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ultrastructural localization of PGP 9.5 and ubiquitin immunoreactivities in rat ductus epididymidis epithelium. 755 92
A quantitative immunohistochemical study was performed of the distribution of protein gene product 9.5 (PGP, a soluble protein localized in neurons and neuroendocrine cells as well as in some non-nervous cells) and
ubiquitin
along the rat epididymis. In the ductuli efferents, PGP immunoreaction was observed in the whole cytoplasm of some columnar cells; a smaller number of columnar cells showed
ubiquitin
immunoreactivity with limited apical and basal cytoplasmic localization. In the proximal caput epididymidis, the whole cytoplasm of all columnar cells showed PGP immunoreactivity,
ubiquitin
immunostaining was negative in this region. In the middle and distal caput epididymidis and the distal cauda, the apical cytoplasm of some columnar cells and the whole cytoplasm of some basal cells showed immunoreactivity to PGP. In these regions, immunoreactivity to
ubiquitin
was positive in the supranuclear cytoplasm of some columnar cells but not in the basal cells. No immunoreactivity to PGP or
ubiquitin
was detected in the corpus epididymis and the proximal cauda. Double immunostaining revealed that all the
epididymal
ubiquitin
immunoreactive cells were also PGP immunoreactive, whereas most PGP immunoreactive cells did not immunoreact to
ubiquitin
. In
ubiquitin
-PGP immunoreactive cells, the site of the PGP immunoreaction differed from that of the
ubiquitin
immunoreaction. PGP-
ubiquitin
immunoreactive cells also seemed to be immunoreactive to anti-AE1/AE3 keratin antibodies. The spermatozoal heads were immunoreactive to PGP antibodies in the
epididymal
regions from proximal caput to distal cauda but not in the ductuli efferents. The findings suggest that non-ubiquitinated PGP immunoreactive proteins are secreted in the epididymis, mainly in the proximal caput, and attach to spermatozoa.
...
PMID:Protein gene product 9.5 and ubiquitin immunoreactivities in rat epididymis epithelium. 824 65
The distribution of protein gene product 9.5 (PGP) and
ubiquitin
immunoreactivities in the ductuli efferentes, ductus epididymidis, and ductus deferens of humans was studied by Western blot analyses and light and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry. PGP immunoreactivity was intense in the ductuli efferentes and weak in the ductus epididymidis and ductus deferens, while
ubiquitin
immunoreactivity was intense in the ductuli efferentes and ductus epididymidis and very weak in the ductus deferens. In the ductuli efferentes epithelium, PGP immunolabeling was observed in the cytoplasm of principal cells, whereas
ubiquitin
immunoreactivity was found in the nucleus and cytoplasm of principal cells and ciliated cells. In the ductus epididymidis epithelium, only scattered cells (mitochondria-rich cells) showed PGP immunoreaction in their cytoplasm, whereas
ubiquitin
immunostaining was detected in the nucleus and cytoplasm of most epithelial cells, except for the cauda, where
ubiquitin
immunolabeling was observed only in the nuclei. The ductus deferens showed no immunostaining for PGP, and only nuclear immunoreactivity to
ubiquitin
. The ultrastructural localization of PGP immunoreactivity was in the apical cytosol and microvilli. In addition to these locations,
ubiquitin
immunoreactivity was also found in the nucleus of all cell types and cilia of ciliated cells. Although the distribution of PGP and
ubiquitin
immunoreactivities in humans differs from that reported in rats, it seems that PGP and ubiquitinated proteins are secreted into the
epididymal
lumen in both species.
...
PMID:Light and electron microscopic immunohistochemical localization of protein gene product 9.5 and ubiquitin immunoreactivities in the human epididymis and vas deferens. 882 31
We have used a rat pachytene spermatocyte cDNA expression library to clone TBP-1 (for tat-binding protein-1; designated rat testis TBP-1 [rtTBP-1]), a new member of the family of putative ATPases associated with the 26S proteasome complex. The 1.63 kb rtTBP-1 cDNA encodes a 49 kDa protein with 99% amino acid identity to human TBP-1 protein. rtTBP-1 protein contains a heptad repeat of six leucine-type zipper fingers at the amino terminal end and highly conserved ATPase and DNA/RNA helicase motifs towards the carboxyl terminal region. Chromatofocusing fractionation of rat testis sucrose extracts demonstrates that the encoded product, recognized by an antiserum raised to the first 196 amino acids of human TBP-1, consists of a protein triplet with a molecular mass range of 52-48 kDa and acidic pI (5.0-5.9). An identical immunoreactive triplet was detected by immunoblotting in extracts of fractionated pachytene spermatocytes, round spermatids and
epididymal
sperm. In situ hybridization using digoxigenin-labeled antisense RNA probes shows a predominant distribution of specific mRNA in the seminiferous epithelial region occupied by elongating spermatids and primary spermatocytes. Indirect immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy studies show that rtTBP-1 immunoreactive sites colocalize with alpha-tubulin-decorated manchettes of elongating spermatids. In addition, rtTBP-1 immunoreactivity was detected in fibrillar and granular cytoplasmic bodies typically observed in spermatocytes and spermatids as well as in association with paraaxonemal mitochondria and outer dense fibers of the developing spermatid tail. Results of this study indicate that rtTBP-1 is a member of the highly evolutionary conserved TBP-1-like subfamily of putative ATPases, sharing regions of identity-including ATP-binding sites-with several subunits of the 26S proteasome, known to be involved in the ATP-dependent degradation of
ubiquitin
-conjugated proteins.
...
PMID:A protein associated with the manchette during rat spermiogenesis is encoded by a gene of the TBP-1-like subfamily with highly conserved ATPase and protease domains. 926 64
The strictly maternal inheritance of mitochondria and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in mammals is a developmental paradox promoted by an unknown mechanism responsible for the destruction of the sperm mitochondria shortly after fertilization. We have recently reported that the sperm mitochondria are ubiquitinated inside the oocyte cytoplasm and later subjected to proteolysis during preimplantation development (P. Sutovsky et al., Nature 1999; 402:371-372). Here, we provide further evidence for this process by showing that the proteolytic destruction of bull sperm mitochondria inside cow egg cytoplasm depends upon the activity of the universal proteolytic marker,
ubiquitin
, and the lysosomal apparatus of the egg. Binding of
ubiquitin
to sperm mitochondria was visualized by monospecific antibodies throughout pronuclear development and during the first embryonic divisions. The recognition and disposal of the ubiquitinated sperm mitochondria was prevented by the microinjection of anti-
ubiquitin
antibodies and by the treatment of the fertilized zygotes with lysosomotropic agent ammonium chloride. The postfecundal ubiquitination of sperm mitochondria and their destruction was not seen in the hybrid embryos created using cow eggs and sperm of wild cattle, gaur, thus supporting the hypothesis that sperm mitochondrion destruction is species specific. The initial ligation of
ubiquitin
molecules to sperm mitochondrial membrane proteins, one of which could be prohibitin, occurs during spermatogenesis. Even though the
ubiquitin
cross-reactivity was transiently lost from the sperm mitochondria during
epididymal
passage, likely as a result of disulfide bond cross-linking, it was restored and amplified after fertilization. Ubiquitination therefore may represent a mechanism for the elimination of paternal mitochondria during fertilization. Our data have important implications for anthropology, treatment of mitochondrial disorders, and for the new methods of assisted procreation, such as cloning, oocyte cytoplasm donation, and intracytoplasmic sperm injection.
...
PMID:Ubiquitinated sperm mitochondria, selective proteolysis, and the regulation of mitochondrial inheritance in mammalian embryos. 1090 68
In marsupials testis determination requires the presence of a Y chromosome. The sex determining region on the Y gene (SRY) is necessary for testicular development in eutherians and it is assumed to play a similar role in marsupials. Relatively few studies have investigated the genetic basis of sexual development, and as yet there is no direct evidence that SRY is required for testis development in marsupials. Studies on intersexual marsupials have revealed a fundamental difference between marsupial and eutherian sex determination. The scrotum of marsupials is analogous, not homologous, to the eutherian scrotum and is under the control of X-linked genes not androgens. The current study describes two bandicoot (Isoodon macrourus) siblings. Both siblings had underdeveloped male reproductive tracts and testicular dysgenesis, one was ascrotal and the other had a diminutive scrotum. Their karyotypes were normal for this species which eliminates the Y chromosome from some somatic tissues. SRY was detected by Southern blotting. SRY,
ubiquitin
activating enzyme-1 on the Y (UBE1Y) and glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) gene expression were examined. UBE1Y was widely expressed in many tissues. SRY gene expression was much lower than normal in the abnormal siblings and may be responsible for their failure of testicular and
epididymal
development. The cause of their scrotal abnormalities is unknown. It is possible that the separate defects of scrotal and testis development in the two siblings, which had normal relatives, were due to a mutation in a gene common to both developmental pathways.
...
PMID:Sexual development in marsupials: genetic characterization of bandicoot siblings with scrotal and testicular maldevelopment. 1098 12
We have previously cloned a cDNA encoding TBP-1, a protein present in the rat spermatid manchette and outer dense fibers of the developing sperm. TBP-1 contains a heptad repeat of six-leucine zipper fingers at the amino terminus and highly conserved ATPase and DNA/RNA helicase motifs toward the carboxyl terminus. TBP-1 is one of the 20 subunits forming the 19S regulatory complex of the 26S proteasome, an ATP-dependent multisubunit protease found in most eukaryotic cells. We now report the isolation of the 26S proteasome from rat testis and sperm tail and its visualization by whole-mount electron microscopy using negative staining. The 26S proteasome from rat testis was fractionated by Sephacryl S-400/Mono-Q chromatography using homogenates suspended in a 10% glycerol-supplemented buffer. Chromatographic fractions were analyzed by immunoblotting using a specific anti-TBP-1 serum. During the purification of Sak57, a keratin filament present in outer dense fibers from
epididymal
sperm, we detected a substantial amount of 26S proteasomes. Intact 26S proteasomes from rat testis display a rod-shaped particles about 45 nm in length and 11-17 nm in diameter. Each particle consists of a 20S barrel-shaped component formed by four rings (alphabetabetaalpha), capped by two polar 19S regulatory complexes, each identified by an element known as the "Chinese dragon head motif". TBP-1 is an ATPase-containing subunit of the 19S regulatory cap. Rat sperm preparations displayed both dissociated 26S proteasomes and Sak57 filaments. We hypothesize that 26S proteasomes in the perinuclear-arranged manchette are in a suitable location for recognition, sequestration, and degradation of accumulating
ubiquitin
-conjugated somatic and transient testis-specific histones during spermiogenesis. In the sperm tail, the 26S proteasome may have a role in the remodeling of the outer dense fibers and other tail components during
epididymal
transit.
...
PMID:Structural features of the 26S proteasome complex isolated from rat testis and sperm tail. 1098 18
The normal structure and function of sperm are prerequisites for successful fertilization and embryonic development, but little is known about how defective sperm are eliminated during mammalian spermatogenesis. Here, we describe a
ubiquitin
-dependent, sperm quality control mechanism that resides in the mammalian epididymis, the site of sperm maturation and storage. We used immunofluorescence, electron microscopy, western blotting and pulse-chase experiments to show that
ubiquitin
is secreted by the
epididymal
epithelium and binds to the surface of defective sperm. Most of the ubiquitinated sperm are subsequently phagocytosed by the
epididymal
epithelial cells. A portion of defective sperm escapes phagocytosis and can be found in the ejaculate. Cultured
epididymal
cells maintain their ability to produce
ubiquitin
and phagocytose the defective sperm, as well as the
ubiquitin
-coated microspheres, in vitro. The surprising phenomenon of cell-surface ubiquitination in defective sperm provides a possible mechanism for sperm quality control in mammals and a new marker of semen abnormalities in men and animals.
...
PMID:A putative, ubiquitin-dependent mechanism for the recognition and elimination of defective spermatozoa in the mammalian epididymis. 1180 18
Defective mammalian spermatozoa become ubiquitinated during
epididymal
passage, a mechanism that may mark the abnormal spermatozoa for proteolytic destruction (Sutovsky et al., 2001a: J Cell Sci 114:1665-1675). It is not known how such spermatozoa are recognized by the
epididymal
ubiquitination pathway and whether there is a selection against certain types of sperm defects. We examined the relationship between sperm ubiqutination, lifelong sperm morphology and sperm DNA defects using a single chanel,
ubiquitin
-activated flow cytometric assay, and a dual,
ubiquitin
-TUNEL assay. Semen samples from nine service sires of good-to-average fertility were screened. A positive correlation was found between sperm ubiquitination and the average frequency of morphological semen abnormalities from field evaluations performed throughout the reproductive life of individual sires. Sample correlation coefficients were r=0.65 for primary (head and tail) and r=0.60 for total semen abnormalities in the single channel assay. In a dual assay, we found a high, positive correlation (r=0.93) between the
ubiquitin
-positive sperm and the TUNEL positive sperm. Substantial correlations (r=0.47-0.64) were observed when the measurements from these two respective assays were compared for individual sires. While anti-
ubiquitin
antibodies recognized most of the TUNEL-positive sperm cells, the TUNEL-positive spermatozoa represented only a subset (approximately 20-40%) of all
ubiquitin
-positive cells. It appears that the
ubiquitin
-dependent sperm quality control, residing in the
epididymal
epithelium, has the ability to detect spermatozoa with apoptotic or necrotic DNA, while spermatozoa with defects other than DNA fragmentation are also recognized and ubiquitinated.
...
PMID:Ubiquitin-dependent sperm quality control mechanism recognizes spermatozoa with DNA defects as revealed by dual ubiquitin-TUNEL assay. 1183 86
Antibodies against
ubiquitin
, a universal proteolytic marker, show increased cross-reactivity with defective spermatozoa in men and bulls. We investigated sperm ubiquitination in the stallion, a seasonally polyestrous mammal. Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that anti-
ubiquitin
antibodies bind to the surface of both membrane-intact and aldehyde-fixed spermatozoa. Cross-reactivity to the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2 was also detected in sperm. Immunohistochemistry showed that ubiquitinated spermatozoa were first detected in the caput epididymis, coincident with a strong accumulation of
ubiquitin
and ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase, protein gene product 9.5, in the apical stereocilia of the
epididymal
epithelium. Testicular spermatozoa did not display significant
ubiquitin
cross-reactivity. Similarly, lesser accumulation of
ubiquitin
cross-reactive substrates was identified in the accessory sex glands. Semen samples were collected from three fertile stallions and one subfertile stallion between December and February and probed for
ubiquitin
by flow cytometry and immunoblotting. Flow cytometric analysis showed that sperm from the subfertile stallion had higher
ubiquitin
levels than sperm from the other three stallions. In addition, immunoblot analysis of sperm proteins from the subfertile stallion showed two unique
ubiquitin
cross-reactive bands that were not present in sperm extracts from the three fertile stallions. To screen for a possible role for
ubiquitin
in seasonal changes in sperm production, semen samples from two fertile stallions were collected in March, June, September, and December and subjected to a flow cytometric
ubiquitin
assay. The lowest levels of
ubiquitin
-labeled sperm were found in March, approximately coincident with the onset of the natural horse breeding season. A progressive increase in sperm
ubiquitin
levels was found during summer and fall, with a peak in December. These data suggest that stallion sperm are differentially ubiquitinated during
epididymal
maturation and that this ubiquitination may reflect changes in sperm numbers and semen quality. The association between changes in sperm ubiquitination and seasonal changes in sperm production will be subjected to further studies in a larger cohort of animals.
...
PMID:Differential ubiquitination of stallion sperm proteins: possible implications for infertility and reproductive seasonality. 1253 36
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