4.8 Article

GIV/Girdin, a non-receptor modulator for Gαi/s, regulates spatiotemporal signaling during sperm capacitation and is required for male fertility

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.69160

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [CA100768, CA160911, CA238042, T32 CA121938]
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [AI141630]
  3. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM095882, GM138385]
  4. American Association of Immunologists Intersect fellowship
  5. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [T32 DK007202]
  6. American Heart Association [14POST20050025]

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The study demonstrates the crucial role of GIV in maintaining normal sperm function and fertilization. GIV orchestrates different signaling programs in the sperm tail and head to enhance motility and prevent premature acrosomal reaction, shedding light on a previously unforeseen cause of male infertility.
For a sperm to successfully fertilize an egg, it must first undergo capacitation in the female reproductive tract and later undergo acrosomal reaction (AR) upon encountering an egg surrounded by its vestment. How premature AR is avoided despite rapid surges in signaling cascades during capacitation remains unknown. Using a combination of conditional knockout (cKO) mice and cell-penetrating peptides, we show that GIV (CCDC88A), a guanine nucleotide-exchange modulator (GEM) for trimeric GTPases, is highly expressed in spermatocytes and is required for male fertility. GIV is rapidly phosphoregulated on key tyrosine and serine residues in human and murine spermatozoa. These phosphomodifications enable GIV-GEM to orchestrate two distinct compartmentalized signaling programs in the sperm tail and head; in the tail, GIV enhances PI3K.Akt signals, sperm motility and survival, whereas in the head it inhibits cAMP surge and premature AR. Furthermore, GIV transcripts are downregulated in the testis and semen of infertile men. These findings exemplify the spatiotemporally segregated signaling programs that support sperm capacitation and shed light on a hitherto unforeseen cause of infertility in men.

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