Two miRNA clusters, miR-34b/c and miR-449, are essential for normal brain development, motile ciliogenesis, and spermatogenesis
Although it is believed that mammalian sperm carry small noncoding RNAs (sncRNAs) into oocytes during fertilization, it remains unknown whether these sperm-borne sncRNAs truly have any function during fertilization and preimplantation embryonic development. Germlinespecific Dicer and Drosha conditional knockout (cKO) mice produce gametes (i.e. sperm and oocytes) partially deficient in miRNAs and/or endo-siRNAs, thus providing a unique opportunity for testing whether normal sperm ( paternal) or oocyte (maternal) miRNA and endosiRNA contents are required for fertilization and preimplantation development. Using the outcome of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) as a readout, we found that sperm with altered miRNA and endo-siRNA profiles could fertilize wild-type (WT) eggs, but embryos derived from these partially sncRNA-deficient sperm displayed a significant reduction in developmental potential, which could be rescued by injecting WT sperm-derived total or small RNAs into ICSI embryos. Disrupted maternal transcript turnover and failure in early zygotic gene activation appeared to associate with the aberrant miRNA profiles in Dicer and Drosha cKO spermatozoa. Overall, our data support a crucial function of paternal miRNAs and/or endosiRNAs in the control of the transcriptomic homeostasis in fertilized eggs, zygotes and two-cell embryos. Given that supplementation of sperm RNAs enhances both the developmental potential of preimplantation embryos and the live birth rate, it might represent a novel means to improve the success rate of assisted reproductive technologies in fertility clinics.
Mammalian sperm are carriers of not only the paternal genome, but also the paternal epigenome in the forms of DNA methylation, retained histones and noncoding RNAs. Although paternal DNA methylation and histone retention sites have been correlated with protein-coding genes that are critical for preimplantation embryonic development, physiological evidence of an essential role of these epigenetic marks in fertilization and early development remains lacking. Two miRNA clusters consisting of five miRNAs (miR-34b/c and miR-449a/b/c) are present in sperm, but absent in oocytes, and miR-34c has been reported to be essential for the first cleavage division in vitro. Here, we show that both miR-34b/c-and miR-449-null male mice displayed normal fertility, and that intracytoplasmic injection of either miR-34b/c-or miR-449-null sperm led to normal fertilization, normal preimplantation development and normal birth rate. However, miR-34b/c and miR-449 double knockout (miR-dKO) males were infertile due to severe spermatogenic disruptions and oligo-astheno-teratozoospermia. Injection of miR-dKO sperm into wild-type oocytes led to a block at the two-pronucleus to zygote transition, whereas normal preimplantation development and healthy pups were obtained through injection of miR-dKO round spermatids. Our data demonstrate that miR-34b/c and miR-449a/b/c are essential for normal spermatogenesis and male fertility, but their presence in sperm is dispensable for fertilization and preimplantation development.
"Pinhead sperm," or "acephalic sperm," a type of human teratozoospermia, refers to the condition in which ejaculate contains mostly sperm flagella without heads. Family clustering and homogeneity of this syndrome suggests a genetic basis, but the causative genes remain largely unknown. Here we report that Spata6, an evolutionarily conserved testis-specific gene, encodes a protein required for formation of the segmented columns and the capitulum, two major structures of the sperm connecting piece essential for linking the developing flagellum to the head during late spermiogenesis. Inactivation of Spata6 in mice leads to acephalic spermatozoa and male sterility. Our proteomic analyses reveal that SPATA6 is involved in myosin-based microfilament transport through interaction with myosin subunits (e.g., MYL6).M ale gametes-spermatozoa-are produced in the testis through a process termed spermatogenesis, which can be divided into three phases: mitotic, meiotic, and haploid (1). In the mitotic phase, spermatogonial stem cells proliferate and differentiate into spermatogonia, which subsequently enter the meiotic phase and become spermatocytes. Spermatocytes undergo crossover, followed by two consecutive meiotic cell divisions to produce haploid spermatids. Spermatids then undergo a multistep differentiation process, also called spermiogenesis, to form spermatozoa. Severe disruptions in either the mitotic or the meiotic phase tend to cause azoospermia, whereas spermiogenic defects often lead to reduced sperm counts, aberrant sperm motility, and deformed spermatozoa, a condition termed oligoasthenoteratozoospermia (OAT) in humans (2, 3).OAT accounts for a significant proportion of male idiopathic infertility cases (2, 4). Numerous cases of acephalic spermatozoa have been reported in teratozoospermic patients (5)(6)(7)(8)(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19). In these patients, the major anomaly lies in headless spermatozoa in the ejaculate, and the headless spermatozoa were initially called "pinhead sperm" because the investigators mistakenly regarded the retained cytoplasmic droplets, which are usually attached to the midprincipal piece junction of the flagella, as the heads of reduced size (8,13,14). Extensive ultrastructral studies on humans and animals with acephalic spermatozoa suggest that this condition results from defects in formation of the connecting piece of spermatozoa during late spermiogenesis, including failure for the proximal centrioles to attach normally to the caudal portion of the sperm nuclei, leading to abnormal head-midpiece alignment, or a nuclear defect that interferes with formation of the implantation fossa, the normal lodging site for the sperm proximal centriole (16). Aberrant formation of the connecting piece leads to independent development of the sperm heads and flagella, and eventually these structures become separated within the seminiferous tubules or during their transition through the seminal tract as a consequence of increased instability of the head-midpiece junction (16,18)....
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