4.7 Article

Sperm-specific glycogen synthase kinase 3 is required for sperm motility and the post-fertilization signal for female meiosis II in Caenorhabditis elegans

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 149, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.200229

Keywords

GSK3; MSP; Fertilization; Meiosis; Sperm motility; Spermatogenesis; Caenorhabditis elegans

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RES0038807]

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In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, two genetic suppressors, gskl-1 and gskl-2, were identified to interact with memi-1(sb41) and play a role in regulating sperm development and fertilization through modulating the major sperm protein (MSP).
In most sexually reproducing animals, sperm entry provides the signal to initiate the final stages of female meiosis. In Caenorhabditis elegans, this signal is required for completion of female anaphase I and entry into meiosis II (MII). memi-1/2/3 (meiosis-to-mitosis) encode maternal components that facilitate this process; memi-1/2/3(RNAi) results in a skipped-MII phenotype. Previously, we used a gain-of-function mutation, memi-1(sb41), to identify genetic suppressors that represent candidates for the sperm-delivered signal. Herein, we characterize two suppressors of memi-1(sb41): gskl-1 and gskl-2. Both genes encode functionally redundant sperm glycogen synthase kinase, type 3 (GSK3) protein kinases. Loss of both genes causes defects in male spermatogenesis, sperm pseudopod treadmilling and paternal-effect embryonic lethality. The two kinases locate within the pseudopod of activated sperm, suggesting that they directly or indirectly regulate the sperm cytoskeletal polymer major sperm protein (MSP). The GSK3 genes genetically interact with another memi-1(sb41) suppressor, gsp-4, which encodes a sperm-specific PP1 phosphatase, previously proposed to regulate MSP dynamics. Moreover, gskl-2 gsp-4; gskl-1 triple mutants often skip female MII, similar to memi-1/2/3(RNAi). The GSK3 kinases and PP1 phosphatases perform similar sperm-related functions and work together for post-fertilization functions in the oocyte that involve MEMI.

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