The long term objective of this application is the better understanding of the biochemical basis of mammalian spermatogenesis.
The specific aims concern the roles of testis-specific chromosomal proteins that occur during restricted stages of germ cell development in spermatocytes and spermatids. These studies may provide information useful for the diagnosis or treatment of male infertility, chromosome abnormalities generated during spermatogenesis, and malignant growths of male germ cells (seminomas). Two groups of testis-specific chromosomal proteins are under study. They are of interest because they presumably play critical roles in specific nuclear events during spermatogenesis and because they are specific gene products whose regulated synthesis reflects the precise program of hormonally influenced gene expression that underlies spermatogenesis. One group of proteins are the testis-specific histone variants (H1t, TH2A, TH2B & TH3) that are synthesized during meiosis, thereby replacing to varying degrees the somatic type histones. Only H1t among these proteins has been characterized in detail, and little is known of the factors regulating their synthesis or of the details of their genetic organization. A second group of testis-specific chromosomal proteins are the TP family (TP1-4) found in elongating spermatids. They seem to serve in the transition from necleosomal to protamine associated DNA. Since they are synthesized well after the completion of meiosis, they either result from haploid gene expression, or they may possibly be translated from messenger RNA synthesized earlier in spermatogenesis and stored in an inactive form. TP1 is the only member of this group to have been well characterized as a protein. We propose to use recombinant DNA technology to characterize the rat genes for H1t and TP1. We anticipate in one or both cases that isolation of the gene for one member of the family will lead to isolation of genes for other members due to gene clustering. Initially DNA copies of mRNA (cDNA) will be cloned in bacterial plasmids. This will depend in part on use of synthetic oligonucleotides. The cDNA clones will then permit selection of recombinant lambda bacteriophage containing the genes for each protein and perhaps genes for other members of the respective families. DNA sequence analysis of isolated genes will provide the complete amino acid sequence for a number of these proteins. The clones will also serve as specific hybridization probes to allow assay of the mRNA for each protein and thus detection of hypothetical stored message particles.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD010793-13
Application #
3311396
Study Section
Reproductive Biology Study Section (REB)
Project Start
1977-05-01
Project End
1992-03-31
Budget Start
1990-04-01
Budget End
1991-03-31
Support Year
13
Fiscal Year
1990
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of South Carolina at Columbia
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
111310249
City
Columbia
State
SC
Country
United States
Zip Code
29208
Kistler, W Stephen; Baas, Dominique; Lemeille, Sylvain et al. (2015) RFX2 Is a Major Transcriptional Regulator of Spermiogenesis. PLoS Genet 11:e1005368
Kistler, W Stephen; Horvath, Gary C; Dasgupta, Anindya et al. (2009) Differential expression of Rfx1-4 during mouse spermatogenesis. Gene Expr Patterns 9:515-9
Horvath, Gary C; Kistler, Malathi K; Kistler, W Stephen (2009) RFX2 is a candidate downstream amplifier of A-MYB regulation in mouse spermatogenesis. BMC Dev Biol 9:63
Ma, Wenli; Horvath, Gary C; Kistler, Malathi K et al. (2008) Expression patterns of SP1 and SP3 during mouse spermatogenesis: SP1 down-regulation correlates with two successive promoter changes and translationally compromised transcripts. Biol Reprod 79:289-300
Horvath, Gary C; Kistler, W Stephen; Kistler, Malathi K (2004) RFX2 is a potential transcriptional regulatory factor for histone H1t and other genes expressed during the meiotic phase of spermatogenesis. Biol Reprod 71:1551-9
Horvath, Gary C; Dasgupta, Anindya; Kistler, Malathi K et al. (2003) The rat histone H1d gene has intragenic activating sequences that are absent from the testis-specific variant H1t. Biochim Biophys Acta 1625:165-72
Loukinov, Dmitri I; Pugacheva, Elena; Vatolin, Sergei et al. (2002) BORIS, a novel male germ-line-specific protein associated with epigenetic reprogramming events, shares the same 11-zinc-finger domain with CTCF, the insulator protein involved in reading imprinting marks in the soma. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99:6806-11
Fantz, D A; Hatfield, W R; Horvath, G et al. (2001) Mice with a targeted disruption of the H1t gene are fertile and undergo normal changes in structural chromosomal proteins during spermiogenesis. Biol Reprod 64:425-31
Horvath, G C; Clare, S E; Kistler, M K et al. (2001) Characterization of the H1t promoter: role of conserved histone 1 AC and TG elements and dominance of the cap-proximal silencer. Biol Reprod 65:1074-81
Bartell, J G; Fantz, D A; Davis, T et al. (2000) Elimination of male germ cells in transgenic mice by the diphtheria toxin A chain gene directed by the histone H1t promoter. Biol Reprod 63:409-16

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