4.6 Article

A genetic variant of the sperm-specific SLO3 K+ channel has altered pH and Ca2+ sensitivities

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 292, Issue 21, Pages 8978-8987

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M117.776013

Keywords

fertilization; patch clamp; potassium channel; reproduction; sperm; spermatozoa; calcium sensitivity; genetic variant; human SLO3; pH sensitivity

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health [R01 HD069631, R21 NS 088611, R21 MH107955, R01 GM114694]

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To fertilize an oocyte, sperm must first undergo capacitation in which the sperm plasma membrane becomes hyperpolarized via activation of potassium (K+) channels and resultant K+ efflux. Sperm-specific SLO3 K+ channels are responsible for these membrane potential changes critical for fertilization in mouse sperm, and they are only sensitive to pH(i). However, in human sperm, the major K+ conductance is both Ca2+- and pH(i)-sensitive. It has been debated whether Ca2+-sensitive SLO1 channels substitute for human SLO3 (hSLO3) in human sperm or whether human SLO3 channels have acquired Ca2+ sensitivity. Here we show that hSLO3 is rapidly evolving and reveal a natural structural variant with enhanced apparent Ca2+ and pH sensitivities. This variant allele (C382R) alters an amino acid side chain at a principal interface between the intramembrane-gated pore and the cytoplasmic gating ring of the channel. Because the gating ring contains sensors to intracellular factors such as pH and Ca2+, the effectiveness of transduction between the gating ring and the pore domain appears to be enhanced. Our results suggest that sperm-specific genes can evolve rapidly and that natural genetic variation may have led to a SLO3 variant that differs from wild type in both pH and intracellular Ca2+ sensitivities. Whether this physiological variation confers differences in fertility among males remains to be established.

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