Journal
FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 3233-3242Publisher
FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL
DOI: 10.1096/fj.09-132795
Keywords
PHGPx; redox metabolism; selenoprotein; spermatogenesis
Categories
Funding
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [CO 291/2-1]
- DFG-Priority Programme [SPP1087]
- Italian Ministry of University and Scientific Research
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Selenium is linked to male fertility. Glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPx4), first described as an antioxidant enzyme, is the predominant selenoenzyme in testis and has been suspected of being vital for spermatogenesis. Cytosolic, mitochondrial, and nuclear isoforms are all encoded by the same gene. While disruption of entire GPx4 causes early embryonic lethality in mice, inactivation of nuclear GPx4 does not impair embryonic development or fertility. Here, we show that deletion of mitochondrial GPx4 (mGPx4) allows both normal embryogenesis and postnatal development, but causes male infertility. Infertility was associated with impaired sperm quality and severe structural abnormalities in the midpiece of spermatozoa. Knockout sperm display higher protein thiol content and recapitulate features typical of severe selenodeficiency. Interestingly, male infertility induced by mGPx4 depletion could be bypassed by intracytoplasmic sperm injection. We also show for the first time that mGPx4 is the prevailing GPx4 product in male germ cells and that mGPx4 disruption has no effect on proliferation or apoptosis of germinal or somatic tissue. Our study finally establishes that mitochondrial GPx4 confers the vital role of selenium in mammalian male fertility and identifies cytosolic GPx4 as the only GPx4 isoform being essential for embryonic development and apoptosis regulation.-Schneider, M., Forster, H., Boersma, A., Seiler, A., Wehnes, H., Sinowatz, F., Neumuller, C., Deutsch, M. J., Walch, A., Hrabe de Angelis, M., Wurst, W., Ursini, F., Roveri, A., Maleszewski, M., Maiorino, M. Conrad, M. Mitochondrial glutathione peroxidase 4 disruption causes male infertility. FASEB J. 23, 3233-3242 ( 2009). www.fasebj.org
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