4.8 Article

SPE-51, a sperm-secreted protein with an immunoglobulin-like domain, is required for fertilization in C. elegans

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 14, Pages 3048-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.06.029

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Fertilization is a crucial process in sexual reproduction that involves the fusion of gametes and the initiation of a new life cycle. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying sperm-egg interaction are not well understood. In a genetic study using Caenorhabditis elegans, researchers identified the spe-51 gene, which codes for a secreted protein involved in the interactions between sperm and egg. This study provides the first experimental evidence of a secreted protein required for fertilization and highlights the importance of sperm-secreted proteins in influencing sperm function.
Fertilization is a fundamental process in sexual reproduction during which gametes fuse to combine their ge-netic material and start the next generation in their life cycle. Fertilization involves species-specific recogni-tion, adhesion, and fusion between the gametes.1,2 In mammals and other model species, some proteins are known to be required for gamete interactions and have been validated with loss-of-function fertility pheno-types.3,4 Yet, the molecular basis of sperm-egg interaction is not well understood. In a forward genetic screen for fertility mutants in Caenorhabditis elegans, we identified spe-51. Mutant worms make sperm that are un-able to fertilize the oocyte but otherwise normal by all available measurements. The spe-51 gene encodes a secreted protein that includes an immunoglobulin (Ig)-like domain and a hydrophobic sequence of amino acids. The SPE-51 protein acts cell autonomously and localizes to the surface of the spermatozoa. We further show that the gene product of the mammalian sperm function gene Sof1 is likewise secreted. This is the first example of a secreted protein required for the interactions between the sperm and egg with genetic valida-tion for a specific function in fertilization in C. elegans (also see spe-365). This is also the first experimental evidence that mammalian SOF1 is secreted. Our analyses of these genes begin to build a paradigm for sperm-secreted or reproductive-tract-secreted proteins that coat the sperm surface and influence their sur-vival, motility, and/or the ability to fertilize the egg.

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