TY - JOUR
T1 - Protein kinase A activity leads to the extension of the acrosomal process in starfish sperm
AU - Niikura, Keisuke
AU - Alam, M. Shahanoor
AU - Naruse, Masahiro
AU - Jimbo, Mitsuru
AU - Moriyama, Hideaki
AU - Reich, Adrian
AU - Wessel, Gary M.
AU - Matsumoto, Midori
N1 - Funding Information:
This work is supported by Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas (22112520 to M.M.) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan (MEXT). Research in the Wessel lab was supported by the National Institutes of Health (HD028152) and the National Science Foundation (IOS-1120972). We gratefully acknowledge the help and support of Dr. Mamiko Yajima during the course of this project. Her humanitarian efforts following the devastating Fukushima Tsunami of 2011 helped many, including us, and one result was the initiation of this collaborative work. We are grateful to her for this.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PY - 2017/7
Y1 - 2017/7
N2 - Acrosomal vesicles (AVs) of sperm undergo exocytosis during the acrosome reaction, which is immediately followed by the actin polymerization-dependent extension of an acrosomal process (AP) in echinoderm sperm. In the starfish Asterias amurensis, a large proteoglycan, acrosome reaction-inducing substance (ARIS), together with asteroidal sperm-activating peptide (asterosap) and/or cofactor for ARIS, induces the acrosome reaction. Asterosap induces a transient elevation of intracellular cGMP and Ca2+ levels, and, together with ARIS, causes a sustained increase in intracellular cAMP and Ca2+. Yet, the contribution of signaling molecules downstream of cAMP and Ca2+ in inducing AV exocytosis and AP extension remain unknown. A modified acrosome reaction assay was used here to differentiate between AV exocytosis and AP extension in starfish sperm, leading to the discovery that Protein kinase A (PKA) inhibitors block AP extension but not AV exocytosis. Additionally, PKA-mediated phosphorylation of target proteins occurs, and these substrates localize at the base of the AP, demonstrating that PKA activation regulates an AP extension step during the acrosome reaction. The major PKA substrate was further identified, from A. amurensis and Asterias forbesi sperm, as a novel protein containing six PKA phosphorylation motifs. This protein, referred to as PKAS1, likely plays a key role in AP actin polymerization during the acrosome reaction.
AB - Acrosomal vesicles (AVs) of sperm undergo exocytosis during the acrosome reaction, which is immediately followed by the actin polymerization-dependent extension of an acrosomal process (AP) in echinoderm sperm. In the starfish Asterias amurensis, a large proteoglycan, acrosome reaction-inducing substance (ARIS), together with asteroidal sperm-activating peptide (asterosap) and/or cofactor for ARIS, induces the acrosome reaction. Asterosap induces a transient elevation of intracellular cGMP and Ca2+ levels, and, together with ARIS, causes a sustained increase in intracellular cAMP and Ca2+. Yet, the contribution of signaling molecules downstream of cAMP and Ca2+ in inducing AV exocytosis and AP extension remain unknown. A modified acrosome reaction assay was used here to differentiate between AV exocytosis and AP extension in starfish sperm, leading to the discovery that Protein kinase A (PKA) inhibitors block AP extension but not AV exocytosis. Additionally, PKA-mediated phosphorylation of target proteins occurs, and these substrates localize at the base of the AP, demonstrating that PKA activation regulates an AP extension step during the acrosome reaction. The major PKA substrate was further identified, from A. amurensis and Asterias forbesi sperm, as a novel protein containing six PKA phosphorylation motifs. This protein, referred to as PKAS1, likely plays a key role in AP actin polymerization during the acrosome reaction.
KW - Asterias amurensis
KW - acrosome reaction
KW - actin polymerization
KW - protein kinase A
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U2 - 10.1002/mrd.22824
DO - 10.1002/mrd.22824
M3 - Article
C2 - 28462533
AN - SCOPUS:85021205033
SN - 1040-452X
VL - 84
SP - 614
EP - 625
JO - Molecular Reproduction and Development
JF - Molecular Reproduction and Development
IS - 7
ER -