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Intramembranal disulfide cross-linking elucidates the super-quaternary structure of mammalian CatSpers
Authors:Christopher Bystroff
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 12180, United States
Abstract:CatSper is a voltage-dependent calcium channel located in the plasma membrane of the sperm flagellum and is responsible for triggering hyperactive motility. A homology model for the transmembrane region was built in which the arrangement of the subunits around the pseudo-four-fold symmetry axis was deduced by the pairing of conserved transmembranal cysteines across mammals. Directly emergent of the predicted quaternary structure is an architecture in which tetramers polymerize through additional, highly conserved cysteines, creating one or more double-rows channels extending the length of the principal piece of the mammalian sperm tail. The few species that are missing these cysteines are eusocial or otherwise monogamous, suggesting that sperm competition is selective for a disulfide-crosslinked macromolecular architecture. The model suggests testable hypotheses for how CatSper channel opening might behave in response to pH, 2-arachidonoylglycerol, and mechanical force. A flippase function is hypothesized, and a source of the concomitant disulfide isomerase activity is found in CatSper-associated proteins β, δ and ε.
Keywords:Electrophysiology  Integral membrane protein  Sperm  Contraception  Hyperactive motility  sperm competition  Disulfide linkage  Bioinformatics  Mechanotransduction  Disulfide isomerase
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