*Brdt is a testis-specific member of the distinctive BET sub-family of bromodomain motif-containing proteins, a motif that binds acetylated lysines and is implicated in chromatin remodeling. Its expression is restricted to the germ line, specifically to pachytene and diplotene spermatocytes and early spermatids. Targeted mutagenesis was used to generate mice carrying a mutant allele of Brdt, Brdt
⌬BD1, which lacks only the first of the two bromodomains that uniquely characterize BET proteins. Homozygous Brdt ⌬BD1/⌬BD1 mice were viable but males were sterile, producing fewer and morphologically abnormal sperm. Aberrant morphogenesis was first detected in step 9 elongating spermatids, and those elongated spermatids that were formed lacked the distinctive foci of heterochromatin at the peri-nuclear envelope. Quantitative reverse transcription (RT)-PCR showed threefold increased levels of histone H1t (Hist1h1t) in Brdt ⌬BD1/⌬BD1 testes and chromatin immunoprecipitation revealed that Brdt protein, but not Brdt ⌬BD1 protein, was associated with the promoter of H1t. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection suggested that the DNA in the Brdt ⌬BD1 mutant sperm could support early embryonic development and yield functional embryonic stem cells. This is the first demonstration that deletion of just one of the two bromodomains in members of the BET sub-family of bromodomain-containing proteins has profound effects on in vivo differentiation.
SummaryBackground-Metformin might reduce insulin requirement and improve glycaemia in patients with type 1 diabetes, but whether it has cardiovascular benefits is unknown. We aimed to investigate whether metformin treatment (added to titrated insulin therapy) reduced atherosclerosis, as measured by progression of common carotid artery intima-media thickness (cIMT), in adults with type 1 diabetes at increased risk for cardiovascular disease.
Male mice lacking cyclin A1 protein are sterile. Their sterility results from an arrest in the meiotic cell cycle of spermatocytes, which we now identify as occurring at late diplotene, immediately before diakinesis. The stage of arrest in cyclin A1-deficient mice is distinct from the arrest seen in spermatocytes that are deficient in its putative catalytic partner Cdk2, which occurs much earlier in pachytene. The arrest in cyclin A1-deficient spermatocytes is also accompanied by an unusual clustering of centromeric heterochromatin. Consistent with a possible defect in the centromeric region, immunofluorescent staining of cyclin A1 protein shows localization in the region of the centromere. Phosphorylation of histone H3 at serine 10 in pericentromeric heterochromatin, which normally occurs in late diplotene, is reduced in spermatocytes from heterozygous Ccna1(+/-) testes and completely absent in spermatocytes with no cyclin A1 protein. Concomitantly, the levels of pericentromeric aurora B kinase, known to phosphorylate histone H3 during meiosis, are partially reduced in spermatocytes from testes of heterozygous mice and further reduced in homozygous null spermatocytes. These data suggest a critical and concentration-dependent function for cyclin A1 in the pericentromeric region in late diplotene of meiosis, perhaps in assembly or function of the passenger protein complex.
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