4.6 Article

Cullin4 E3 Ubiquitin Ligases Regulate Male Gonocyte Migration, Proliferation and Blood-Testis Barrier Homeostasis

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10102732

Keywords

ubiquitination; Cullin4; spermatogenesis; blood-testis barrier

Categories

Funding

  1. Washington University School of Medicine
  2. Childrens Discovery Institute of Washington University
  3. St. Louis Childrens Hospital [CDI-CORE-2015-505, CDI-CORE-2019-813]
  4. Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital [3770, 4642]

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Here we demonstrate the essential roles of Cul4a and Cul4b in murine spermatogenesis, with Cul4a promoting meiosis in primary spermatocytes and Cul4b participating in spermiogenesis in secondary spermatocytes. Deletion of both genes leads to severe germ cell defects, indicating functional redundancy between the two CUL4 proteins. Additionally, deleting Cul4b in germ and Sertoli cells affects spermatogenesis and BTB integrity, highlighting the involvement of CUL4B in maintaining germ cell development and BTB structure.
Ubiquitination, an essential posttranslational modification, plays fundamental roles during mammalian spermatogenesis. We previously reported the requirement of two Cullin 4 ubiquitin ligase family genes, Cullin 4a (Cul4a) and Cullin 4b (Cul4b), in murine spermatogenesis. Both genes are required for male fertility despite their distinct functions in different cell populations. Cul4a is required in primary spermatocytes to promote meiosis while Cul4b is required in secondary spermatocytes for spermiogenesis. As the two genes encode proteins that are highly homologous and have overlapping expression in embryonic germ cells, they may compensate for each other during germ cell development. In the present study, we directly address the potential functional redundancy of these two proteins by deleting both Cul4 genes, specifically, in the germ cell lineage during embryonic development, using the germ-cell specific Vasa-Cre line. Conditional double-knockout (dKO) males showed delayed homing and impaired proliferation of gonocytes, and a complete loss of germ cells before the end of the first wave of spermatogenesis. The dKO male germ cell phenotype is much more severe than those observed in either single KO mutant, demonstrating the functional redundancy between the two CUL4 proteins. The dKO mutant also exhibited atypical tight junction structures, suggesting the potential involvement of CUL4 proteins in spermatogonial stem cell (SSC) niche formation and blood-testis-barrier (BTB) maintenance. We also show that deleting Cul4b in both germ and Sertoli cells is sufficient to recapitulate part of this phenotype, causing spermatogenesis defects and drastically reduced number of mature sperms, accompanied by defective tight junctions in the mutant testes. These results indicate the involvement of CUL4B in maintaining BTB integrity.

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