There is pronounced promiscuity and sperm competition in long-tailed field mice (Apodemus sylvaticus). These mice have evolved unusual sperm behaviour favouring rapid fertilisation, including dynamic formation of sperm trains and their subsequent dissociation. The cell surface complement regulatory (CReg) protein CD46 is broadly expressed in eutherian mammals other than rodents, in which it is expressed solely on the spermatozoal acrosomal membrane. Ablation of the CD46 gene has been associated with a faster acrosome reaction (AR) rate in inbred laboratory mice. Here, we demonstrate that wild-caught field mice of three species, A. sylvaticus, A. flavicollis and A. microps, exhibit a more rapid AR than wild-caught house mice Mus musculus or inbred laboratory BALB/c mice. We also demonstrate that wild-caught field mice of these three species, unlike house mice, produce alternatively spliced transcripts of testicular CD46 mRNA lacking exons 5-7 or 6-7, together with an extended 3 0 -and often truncated 5 0 -utr, leading to failure to express any sperm CD46 protein in both the testis and epididymis. Male field mice may therefore have traded expression of this CReg protein for acrosomal instability, providing a novel genus-specific strategy to favour rapid fertilisation and competitive advantage in the promiscuous reproductive behaviour of wild field mice.
Background: In rodents, the cell surface complement regulatory protein CD46 is expressed solely on the spermatozoal acrosome membrane. Ablation of the CD46 gene is associated with a faster acrosome reaction. Sperm from Apodemus flavicollis (yellow-necked field mice), A. microps (pygmy field mice) and A. sylvaticus (European wood mice) fail to express CD46 protein and exhibit a more rapid acrosome reaction rate than Mus (house mice) or BALB/c mice. A. agrarius (striped field mice) belong to a different Apodemus subgenus and have pronounced promiscuity and large relative testis size. The aim of this study was to determine whether A. agrarius sperm fail to express CD46 protein and, if so, whether A. agrarius have a faster acrosome reaction than Mus.
Sperm apical hooks in murine rodents play an important role in sperm competition. Apical hooks are more curved and longer in species with relatively larger testes, that is in species with a higher risk of sperm competition. The sperm can form aggregations, 'trains', that can move faster than individual sperm, thus reaching the egg earlier as was observed in Apodemus sylvaticus. The apical hook plays an important role for train formation. This study focuses on the changes in the curvature of sperm apical hooks during the final stages of spermiogenesis and stages before fertilization (sperm-life span). Apical hook curvatures of field mice (A. agrarius and A. sylvaticus) vary significantly between dormant and active sperm. In contrast, there are no significant differences among the stages in the eastern house mouse. Since there are high ranges of angle values in all stages, the mean angles of apical hook curvature are not appropriate for evaluating risk of sperm competiton. The ranges of angle values point to a level of flexibility of the apical hooks. The lengths of sperm hooks in individual species do not change during particular stages. The length and flexibility of the sperm apical hooks are important for the formation of sperm aggregations, thus these sperm characters indicate the risk of sperm competition and the sperm strategies in murine rodents.
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