During spermiogenesis, spermatids acquire the acrosome and flagellum, condense their chromatin and become spermatozoa. Precise expression of spermatid differentiation markers is critical for proper formation of sperm. The overall goal of our research is to understand the mechanisms of transcriptional regulation of spermiogenesis. The gene encoding the acrosomal protein SP-10 serves as an experimental model. Promoter analysis showed that the proximal promoter of the SP-10 gene was sufficient for transcriptional activation in spermatids. Surprisingly, the same promoter caused transcriptional repression in all other cells by acting as an insulator. The central hypothesis is that coordinated interplay of testis-specific transcriptional activators and ubiquitously expressed transcriptional repressors dictates the precise stage- and cell-specific expression of spermatid differentiation markers and that the germ cell-specific genes retain the necessary cis-elements in the proximal promoters. This proposal will test the hypothesis that in vivo, specific cis elements in the SP-10 proximal promoter mediate the enhancer function in spermatids and insulator / repressor function in all other cells, and that the cognate transcriptional activators and repressors alternate promoter occupancy to induce ON and OFF states of SP-10 gene transcription, respectively. The study will focus on the -186/+28 SP-10 promoter, which showed both enhancer and insulator activities, and characterize transcription factors mediating these functions. TNP47, a 47kD testis nuclear protein, which specifically binds the -186/-148 region in vitro, will be cloned by DNA affinity method and its role in SP-10 transcription determined (Aim 1). Whether TDP43 and PURalpha, transcriptional repressors cloned using the -186/-148 DNA, mediate the SP-10 insulator function will be determined by cotransfections and RNAi, their promoter occupancy in vivo will be determined by chromatin IP (Aim 2). The hypothesis that the coordinated interplay of TNP47, TDP43 and PURalpha is sufficient to ensure spermatid-specific transcription will be tested in transgenic mice using the -186/-148 regulatory promoter in the context of its native (SP-10) as well as heterologous core promoters (Aim 3). The results will enumerate molecular mechanisms underlying spermiogenesis. The study is relevant to male reproductive health as leads can be applied to develop novel male contraceptives. The SP-10 promoter will be useful for gene therapy to treat infertility or germ cell defects.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01HD036239-06A1
Application #
6773455
Study Section
Reproductive Biology Study Section (REB)
Program Officer
Rankin, Tracy L
Project Start
1998-12-08
Project End
2009-03-31
Budget Start
2004-04-01
Budget End
2005-03-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2004
Total Cost
$304,363
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Virginia
Department
Anatomy/Cell Biology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
065391526
City
Charlottesville
State
VA
Country
United States
Zip Code
22904
Osuru, Hari Prasad; Pramoonjago, Patcharin; Abhyankar, Mayuresh M et al. (2017) Immunolocalization of TAR DNA-binding protein of 43?kDa (TDP-43) in mouse seminiferous epithelium. Mol Reprod Dev 84:675-685
Osuru, Hari Prasad; Monroe, Jennifer E; Chebolu, Apoorv P et al. (2014) The acrosomal protein SP-10 (Acrv1) is an ideal marker for staging of the cycle of seminiferous epithelium in the mouse. Mol Reprod Dev 81:896-907
Lalmansingh, Avin S; Urekar, Craig J; Reddi, Prabhakara P (2011) TDP-43 is a transcriptional repressor: the testis-specific mouse acrv1 gene is a TDP-43 target in vivo. J Biol Chem 286:10970-82