2020
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1922650117
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Sperm proteins SOF1, TMEM95, and SPACA6 are required for sperm−oocyte fusion in mice

Abstract: Sperm−oocyte membrane fusion is one of the most important events for fertilization. So far, IZUMO1 and Fertilization Influencing Membrane Protein (FIMP) on the sperm membrane and CD9 and JUNO (IZUMO1R/FOLR4) on the oocyte membrane have been identified as fusion-required proteins. However, the molecular mechanisms for sperm−oocyte fusion are still unclear. Here, we show that testis-enriched genes, sperm−oocyte fusion required 1 (Sof1/Llcfc1/ Show more

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Cited by 119 publications
(184 citation statements)
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“…Since Spint4/5 null male mice are severely subfertile, without an apparent difference in epididymis histology, sperm number, sperm morphology, and sperm motility parameters in comparison to the wild-type (WT) mice, this phenocopies the reproductive phenotype of several null mice of testis-, epididymis-, or prostate-specific genes (Sof1, Tmem95, and Spaca6; Pate8, and Pate10), which reveal a requirement in regulating sperm migration through the oviduct and sperm-oocyte fusion in mice [92,93]. A severe fertility defect associated with normal sperm number, morphology, and motility is also shared among mice lacking the sperm membrane protein ADAM3, thought to be crucial in sperm-ZP binding and sperm migration through the uterotubular junction (UTJ) [94,95].…”
Section: Drug Target Specificity Of Novel Targetsmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Since Spint4/5 null male mice are severely subfertile, without an apparent difference in epididymis histology, sperm number, sperm morphology, and sperm motility parameters in comparison to the wild-type (WT) mice, this phenocopies the reproductive phenotype of several null mice of testis-, epididymis-, or prostate-specific genes (Sof1, Tmem95, and Spaca6; Pate8, and Pate10), which reveal a requirement in regulating sperm migration through the oviduct and sperm-oocyte fusion in mice [92,93]. A severe fertility defect associated with normal sperm number, morphology, and motility is also shared among mice lacking the sperm membrane protein ADAM3, thought to be crucial in sperm-ZP binding and sperm migration through the uterotubular junction (UTJ) [94,95].…”
Section: Drug Target Specificity Of Novel Targetsmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…There is also a tacit assumption that the candidate fusogen maintains its activity when isolated from its native biological environment and expressed in a heterologous system. Like IZUMO1, SPACA6, FIMP, TMEM95, and SOF1 are not able to induce cell fusion either alone or together when assessed in a cell fusion assay [25][26][27][28]. These novel sperm proteins, therefore, seem unlikely to be the long-sought-after molecule that induces fusion in mammalian gametes.…”
Section: Gamete Fusogens: An Evolutionary Perspectivementioning
confidence: 92%
“…Evidence suggesting that ZP3 and/or glycans are the ZP sperm receptor has also been obtained [35]; however, targeted gene deletion experiments in animal models did not settle the question because ZP2 and ZP3 are necessary for the formation of the ZP [29,36]. Notably, none of the new essential sperm proteins seem to be involved in ZP binding, as removal of the ZP does not overcome the infertility defect of gene-deleted sperm [25][26][27][28]. The crystal structure of ZP proteins might finally provide the long-awaited answer, and a recent structure of the ZP domain, a protein polymerisation module of approximately 260 amino acids found in many secreted proteins including all ZPs, suggests that the sperm-binding region might lie at the interface between the ZP2 and ZP3 subunits [37].…”
Section: How Does the Sperm Recognise The Zp?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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