(Received for publication, October 22, 1996)
From the Department of Medical Biochemistry,
University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 4N1 and
§ Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Queen's
University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6
The study of mammalian sperm tail outer dense fibers (ODF), a structure of unknown function, is hampered by the insoluble nature of ODF proteins and the availability of only one cloned component, Odf27. We report here the first use of the Odf27 leucine zipper as bait in a yeast two-hybrid screen to isolate a novel testis-specific protein whose interaction with Odf27 depends critically on the Odf27 leucine zipper. We find that the novel gene, 111-450, encodes a product that localizes to ODF as determined by fluorescence microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy and that the gene 111-450 product is identical to the major ODF protein, Odf84. Interestingly, Odf84 contains two C-terminal leucine zippers, and we demonstrate that all leucine residues in the upstream leucine zipper are required for interaction with Odf27, demonstrating the strategic validity of our approach. The use of the yeast screening approach to isolate leucine zipper containing proteins should be useful in other systems, and our findings have implications for ODF structural models.
The tails of spermatozoa contain unique cytoskeletal structures, not present in unicellular flagella and cilia, that may play an important but yet undefined role in sperm integrity, motility, and durability (1-6). These structures, the outer dense fibers (ODF),1 which surround the axoneme, and the fibrous sheath (FS), which surrounds the ODF, contain multiple proteins and are highly insoluble (1, 4, 7-13). The ODF and FS proteins appear to be produced in elongating spermatids (14) and are cross-linked via disulfide bonds (7, 9, 15). Previous studies had shown that ODF morphogenesis starts at the proximal portion of the axoneme and proceeds distally, whereas FS morphogenesis begins at the distal end of the developing sperm tails and proceeds proximally (14, 16, 17). ODF, which are present in the sperm tail midpiece and principal piece, are not homogeneous but contain a thin cortex around a central medulla (4, 11).
The polypeptide composition of ODF has been investigated for a number of species (11-13, 18, 19). Rat ODF contain six major proteins (84, 71, 40, 27, 20, and 14 kDa) as well as a number of less abundant peptides (11-13). Many of these proteins are phosphorylated on serine residues, but a role for this in tail function or in ODF morphogenesis has not been established (12, 20). Antibodies raised against these peptides provided a detailed description of their synthesis in elongating spermatids and also indicated that several ODF and FS proteins appear to be immunologically related (13, 14, 21).
The study of the function of individual proteins in mature mammalian ODF and FS has been hampered by the insoluble nature of these structures and the lack of cloned ODF and FS genes (only one FS protein has been cloned) (22, 23). Although highly probable, it is unclear if ODF proteins interact and if such interactions are important during development of ODF. The absence of one or more ODF or FS proteins or a disturbance in ODF protein interactions could be the basis for abnormal sperm tails or nonfunctional tails, often associated with male infertility (24, 25).
One ODF protein, the 27-kDa major ODF protein, has been cloned by
different strategies (clones were named Rt7 (26), rts 5/1 (27), and
Odf27 (28)). The odf27 gene is abundantly transcribed in
spermatids and translated in elongating spermatids. We demonstrated that the odf27 promoter confers spermatid-specific
expression (29, 30) and that it is activated by the spermatid-specific Crem transcription factor (31). Analysis of the predicted Odf27 amino acid sequence revealed two putative domains. The N terminus contains a stretch of 4 heptade repeats of leucine and valine residues,
resembling a leucine zipper (26, 32), and the C-terminal half contains
16 PCX repeats (of which 6 are PCG), a domain also found in
proteins encoded by the Drosophila Mst(3)CGP family of genes, whose products are male germ line-specific (33-36). Since leucine zippers act as dimerization motifs in the bZIP family of
transcription factors, we have recently investigated the possibility of
Odf27 self-interaction. We found that indeed Odf27 can self-associate both in vitro and in vivo by means of its leucine
zipper but that these interactions are very weak (37). We therefore
decided to investigate if the Odf27 leucine zipper can interact
strongly with other testis-specific proteins. We screened a rat testis cDNA expression library in a yeast two-hybrid approach using the Odf27 N terminus, containing its leucine zipper, as bait. We obtained a
cDNA of a gene, which is expressed specifically and abundantly in
male germ cells. Its interaction with Odf27 depends critically upon the
presence of the Odf27 leucine zipper. By immunoelectron microscopy we
found that this gene, 111-450, encodes a sperm tail-specific protein
that localizes with Odf27 to outer dense fibers. Gene 111-450 encodes
the 84-kDa ODF protein, which harbors two leucine zippers. We propose a
model where leucine zippers are an essential motif used in specific
interactions of cytoskeletal sperm-specific proteins.
Library Construction
Testicular Yeast cDNA Expression LibraryTotal RNA was
isolated from testes of adult Harlan Sprague Dawley rats using the acid
guanidinium thiocyanate/phenol/chloroform method as described
previously (38). Poly(A)+ RNA was prepared using oligo(dT)
cellulose as described (39). cDNA synthesis was performed using the
RiboClone cDNA synthesis system (Promega). cDNA was synthesized
using 2 µg of the C-T17 primer (5 AAGCGGCCGCGTCGACAT17
3
), which harbors NotI and SalI restriction
sites, and 6 µg of poly(A)+ RNA, EcoRI
adapters were added, and cDNA fragments greater than 400 base pairs
were isolated and inserted into the EcoRI and
SalI site of pGAD424. The ligated DNA was transformed into
Escherichia coli DH5a. Transformed colonies were scraped
from the plates and pGAD/cDNA plasmid DNA was prepared using
standard techniques.
Double-stranded
cDNA prepared as described above was digested with NotI,
and fragments greater than 400 base pairs were purified and ligated to
gt11 EcoRI-NotI arms (Promega). Ligated DNA
was in vitro packaged (Promega). The library contained
approximately 1 × 106 recombinants and was amplified
as described (39).
Yeast Two-hybrid Screening
pGBT/NT, containing the N-terminal 145 amino acids of Odf27
fused to the GAL4 DNA binding domain, was transformed into the yeast
HF7c strain as described below generating strain HF7c(bd/NT). HF7c(bd/NT) cells were transformed with 100 µg of the pGAD/cDNA library and spread on 100 90-mm plates containing media lacking Trp,
Leu, and His. Plates were incubated for 8 days at 30 °C to allow
slower growing colonies to appear. His+ colonies were
tested for -galactosidase activity using a filter assay; a filter
(VWR, grade 413) was placed on transformant colonies, lifted off the
agar plate, and submerged in liquid nitrogen for 10 s and thawed
at room temperature to lyse cells. The filter was then placed, colony
side up, on a filter (VWR, grade 413) that was presoaked in Z
buffer/5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indoyl
-D-galactoside solution
(100 ml of Z buffer, 1.61 g of
Na2HPO4·7H2O, 0.55 g of NaH2PO4·H2O, 0.075 g of KCl,
0.0246 g of MgSO4·7H2O, 0.27 ml of
-mercaptoethanol, 1.67 ml of 40 mg/ml 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indoyl
-D-galactoside) and incubated at 30 °C overnight. To
eliminate false positives His+lacZ+ colonies
were grown in synthetic media lacking Leu to enable isolation of
pGAD/cDNA plasmids, which were obtained by replica inoculation on
plates lacking only Leu or lacking both Trp and Leu.
Leu+Trp
segregants were assayed for
lacZ activity. Plasmid DNA was isolated from
lacZ
segregants and was retransformed into
HF7c in the following combinations and tested for
-galactosidase
activity to further eliminate false positives: pGAD/cDNA plasmid
alone, pGAD/cDNA plasmid with pGBT9, pGAD/cDNA plasmid
with pGBT/NT, pGAD/cDNA plasmid with pVA3.
Yeast Transformation and Plasmid DNA Preparation
Twenty ml of an overnight HF7c culture in YPD medium, started from a single colony, was transferred to 300 ml of fresh YPD medium in a 1-liter flask and incubation was continued for 3 to 4 h at 30 °C. The cells were centrifuged at 2500 × g for 5 min at room temperature, washed with 50 ml of sterile water, and resuspended in 1.5 ml of 1 × TE/LiAc solution (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1 M lithium acetate). 0.1 µg of each type of plasmid DNA, 100 µg of denatured salmon sperm carrier DNA, and 100 µl of the yeast competent cells were mixed in a 1.5-ml microcentrifuge tube. Next, 0.6 ml of sterile PEG/LiAc solution (40% PEG 4000, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1 M lithium acetate) was added, mixed, and incubated at 30 °C for 30 min with shaking (200 rpm). Seventy µl of dimethyl sulfoxide was added (to 10% final concentration) and mixed, and the cells were heat-shocked for 15 min at 42 °C in a water bath, cells were chilled on ice and pelleted by centrifugation for 5 s at 14,000 rpm in a microcentrifuge, and resuspended in 0.5 ml of TE buffer. 0.1 ml of the transformation mixture was spread onto a 100-mm plate containing the appropriate synthetic selection medium. Plates were incubated at 30 °C for 2-3 days.
Plasmid DNA was isolated from yeast cells essentially as described (40). 2-ml cultures of Leu+ yeast transformants were grown overnight in SD liquid medium lacking Leu. Cells were collected and resuspended in the residual liquid. Then 0.2 ml of lysis solution (2% Triton X-100, 1% SDS, 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 1.0 mM EDTA), 0.2 ml of phenol/chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1), and 0.3 g of acid-washed glass beads were added, and the mixture was vortexed for 2 min and spun for 5 min in a microcentrifuge. Five µl of the aqueous layer was used to transform 0.1 ml of competent E. coli DH5a cells. From E. coli plasmid DNAs were obtained using standard techniques as described (39).
DNA Sequence Analysis
cDNA inserts from pGAD/cDNA plasmids were subcloned into pBluescript II KS+. Sequence analysis was performed using a cycle sequencing kit (Applied Biosystems), and samples were processed on an automated DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems) in the DNA Sequencing Facility at the University of Calgary. Sequence data were edited and analyzed using PCGENE (Intelligenetics) programs.
Generation of Leucine Zipper Mutants
The pGAD/450 EcoRI-SalI insert was cloned
in pBluescript II KS+ and pBluescript SK,
generating pBS-KS-450 and pBS-450, respectively (note that the orientation of the insert differs in these two vectors). Four oligonucleotides were designed that replace one of the four leucine residues in the putative leucine zipper motif of gene 111-450 by
charged amino acid as indicated in Fig. 1. The oligonucleotides were as
follows: mutLeu1 (5
GACAATGATCTCCAACTCATCGTCTCC 3
; Leu
Asp),
mutLeu2 (5
TGTCACCCGGTCATTGTTAACAATGATCT 3
; Leu
Asn), mutLeu3 (5
CTCCAAGCTCTGTTGTTGGTTGACGTCATCTGTC 3
; Leu
Asp) and mutLeu4 (5
TTCCCGCATCTTCTCCTCTCTAGACTGTTGTTGGTT 3
; Leu
Arg). The four leucine
mutants were made as follows. 1) Four separate PCR reactions were
performed using the T7 primer and one of the four oligonucleotides as
primers and pBS-KS-450 as template. The four PCR products were
isolated. 2) These PCR products and the T7 primer were employed as
primers in a second set of four PCR reactions using pBS-450 as
template. The resulting PCR products were cloned in the
EcoRI and SalI site of pGAD424, generating pGAD-mutL1, pGAD-mutL2, pGAD-mutL3, and pGAD-mutL4. The sequence of
each mutant was analyzed. The mutants were next analyzed in yeast for
interaction with pGBT/NT as described above.
In Vitro Translation and Immunoprecipitation
In vitro
translations were performed using the TNT system
(Promega) in the presence of [35S]Cys using plasmids
indicated in the text and legends as recommended by the manufacturer.
For this analysis we subcloned the inserts of plasmid pGAD/450 as an
EcoRI-SalI fragment in a modified pBluescript II
KS+ vector, pBS-ATG; pBS-ATG was produced by insertion of
an oligonucleotide into the unique XbaI site that contains
an ATG translation initiation codon. Inserts in the pBS-ATG vector can
be efficiently translated in vitro using T7 RNA polymerase
(Pharmacia Biotech Inc.) to produce RNA. The resulting plasmid was
pBS-ATG-450.
Twelve µl of in vitro translation reactions and 0.4 µl of T7.Tag monoclonal antibody (Novagen) were added to 20 µl of protein A-Sepharose-Cl4B beads (Pharmacia), which had been preincubated in immunoprecipitation (IP) buffer (10% glycerol, 50 mM Hepes-KOH, pH 8.0, 100 mM glutamate, 6 mM MgOAc, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM EGTA, 0.1% Nonidet P-40, 0.5 mg/ml bovine serum albumin) and were mixed with 200 µl of fresh IP buffer. The reactions were incubated on a Nutator for 3 h at 4 °C, spun in a microcentrifuge, and washed 3 times with 1.5 ml of IP buffer. Samples were denatured and analyzed by electrophoresis on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. Gels were stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue, destained, and dried, and proteins were detected by autoradiography using Kodak XAR film.
RNA Analysis
RNA was isolated from the mouse organs indicated in the text as described above. Spermatocytes and spermatids were obtained by centrifugal elutriation of SD rat spermatogenic cells as described previously (30, 41), and RNA was isolated as described above. RNA samples were analyzed by Northern blotting/hybridization using Duralon-UVTM membranes (Stratagene) and indicated random-primed probes as described (39). Membranes were washed and exposed to Kodak XAR film.
Antibody Preparation
The cDNA insert of pGAD/450 was subcloned as an EcoRI/SalI fragment into pMAL-c2, in frame with the MBP protein, generating pMBP-450. The 58-kDa MBP-450 fusion protein was induced in TB1 bacteria, purified using amylose-agarose beads (Sigma), and used to generate polyclonal antisera in New Zealand White rabbits. Antisera were characterized by Western blotting analyses.
Anti-ODF serum was raised in rabbits against isolated ODF fraction as described previously (13). This immune serum, which recognizes all major ODF proteins, was used to affinity purify antibodies from Western blot-immobilized Odf27 or Odf84 proteins by a method described previously (42) and originally adapted from Ref. 43.
Isolation of Outer Dense Fibers
The isolation of rat outer dense fibers followed a previously published protocol (13) with several modifications. Briefly, epididymal spermatozoa suspended in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) were sonicated to separate heads and tails. The suspension was washed twice by centrifugation, and the final pellet was resuspended in TBS containing 80% sucrose, followed by centrifugation at 280,000 × g for 1 h in a Ti60 angle rotor (Beckman). The tail pellet obtained on the inside of the tube (centripetal side) was resuspended in TBS containing 40% sucrose and layered over a 60-80% sucrose gradient buffered in TBS. The discontinuous gradient was spun at 100,000 × g for 1 h on a horizontal rotor, and a virtually pure tail fraction was obtained from the 60 to 80% interface. The fraction was subsequently washed and pelleted. All steps were monitored by phase contrast and electron microscopy.
To obtain ODF the tail fractions were suspended in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 9.0, containing 1% SDS and 2 mM dithiothreitol and shaken at room temperature for various times, ranging from 30 to 90 min, until only the resistant ODF remained as monitored by phase contrast and electron microscopy. The ODF and solubilized tail suspension was then layered over a 35-75% sucrose gradient and centrifuged at 100,000 × g on a horizontal rotor for 30 min. The ODF band collected at the 35-75% interface was suspended in Tris-HCl and pelleted at 25,000 × g for 15 min.
Immunocytochemistry
Immunofluorescence analysis of 111-450 protein expression in frozen sections of rat testis and in isolated epididymal sperm was done as described previously (44) using polyclonal anti-111-450 antibodies and Texas Red-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit antibodies (Amersham Corp.). The same sections and epididymal sperm were also analyzed for expression of Odf27 using anti-Odf27 monoclonal antibodies and fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated sheep anti-mouse MAb-Ig antibodies (Boehringer Mannheim).
Immunoelectron microscopic analysis of sections through rat sperm tails was performed as described previously. Testicular sections, fixed and embedded in Lowicryl K4M were processed for immunogold labeling according to techniques previously used in our laboratory (13, 45).
Western Blot Analysis
ODF fractions were solubilized in 2% SDS, 5%
-mercaptoethanol sample buffer and separated by electrophoresis on
8-18% linear gradient polyacrylamide gels. Proteins were
electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose or polyvinylidene
difluoride membranes in a solution of 25 mM
Na2HPO2, pH 6.5, and protein bands were detected on blots by staining in 0.2% Ponceau Red in 3%
trichloroacetic acid. Membrane strips were analyzed using anti-111-450
and affinity purified anti-Odf84 antibodies and a secondary antibody
conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (goat anti-rabbit IgG, Sigma). The
phosphatase reaction was developed according to Ref. 46.
We employed the
yeast two-hybrid system (47) to identify testicular proteins that
strongly interact with the Odf27 leucine zipper. For bait we
constructed a hybrid of the Odf27 N terminus fused to the GAL4
DNA-binding domain, pGBT/NT. A rat testis yeast cDNA expression
library containing cDNAs fused to the GAL4 transactivation domain
was constructed. pGBT/NT was introduced in yeast strain HF7c, and the
resulting HF7c(bd/NT) yeast strain was used to screen the cDNA
fusion-expression library. Of 1 × 106 yeast
transformants screened 65 clones were
His+lacZ+. Segregants containing only
pGAD/cDNA plasmids were generated and tested further to eliminate
false positives. One group of related cDNA clones were identified
whose products strongly interact with the Odf27 N terminus. A
representative plasmid, pGAD450, contained a cDNA insert of
approximately 0.45 kb and was used for further initial analyses. First,
the plasmid was retransformed into the original yeast host strain.
Table I shows the results of tested combinations to
confirm specificity of interactions; pGAD450 could not activate the
lacZ reporter gene by itself or in combination with pGBT9 or
pVA3, which encodes a hybrid p53/GAL4 DBD protein. Second, to determine
if the leucine zipper motif of Odf27 was responsible for the observed
interaction, we analyzed the interaction between pGAD-450 and different
Odf27 N-terminal fragments: Odf27NT (amino acids 1-145), Odf27NT100
(amino acids 1-100), and Odf27LZ (amino acids 35-145) that lacks
the leucine zipper. The results in Fig. 1, panel
A, show that Odf27 fragments containing the leucine zipper
strongly interact with the novel protein. Deletion of the Odf27 leucine
zipper abolished this interaction. These results demonstrate that the
Odf27 leucine zipper mediated the interaction between Odf27 and the
novel protein and predicted the presence of leucine zipper(s) on this
protein.
|
To verify by an independent method the interaction between the novel
protein and Odf27, we carried out in vitro
transcription/translation assays and co-immunoprecipitation
experiments. We used pET/RT7NT (44) containing the Odf27 N terminus
linked to the S10 epitope tag, which can be specifically recognized, to
express the Odf27 N terminus in vitro. The cDNA fragment
in pGAD-450 was cloned in pBS-ATG (see "Experimental Procedures"),
which provides for a translation start site. Single and co-translation
reactions were performed using these plasmids, and protein complexes
were immunoprecipitated using S10-specific antibodies. Control
translations contained only one plasmid. The results are shown in Fig.
2; first pBS-450 encodes a 16.5-kDa protein (lane
2) that is not recognized by the anti-S10 antibodies (lane
4). The S10-Odf27 N-terminal fusion fragment is efficiently
immunoprecipitated using these antibodies (lanes 5 and
6). Importantly, the 16.5-kDa protein encoded by pBS-450
stably associated in vitro with the Odf27 N terminus as
indicated by its efficient co-immunoprecipitation (lane 8).
These results demonstrate that the novel testicular gene product can
associate efficiently with Odf27NT in vitro confirming the
initial observations made in yeast.
Gene 111-450 Encodes Male Germ Cell-specific Product
For the
association between Odf27 and the novel gene product to be
physiologically relevant, it must be expressed in spermatids, the only
site of synthesis of Odf27, but the possibility existed that the Odf27
LZ had interacted in yeast with LZ-containing proteins that are not
expressed in spermatids but rather in somatic testicular cells or other
male germ cells. We therefore analyzed the RNA expression pattern of
gene 111-450 in the mouse by Northern blotting assays using total
tissue RNAs. The results from these assays are shown in Fig.
3, panel A, and demonstrate that gene 111-450 encodes two transcripts of 3.2 and 2.1 kb that are only detectable in
mouse testis. Thus the novel gene encodes testis-specific product.
We next investigated the RNA expression of gene 111-450 in isolated round spermatids and pachytene spermatocytes by Northern blot analysis (testis and liver RNAs were included as positive and negative controls). The results shown in Fig. 3, panel B, indicated that 111-450 gene transcripts are expressed in male germ cells; mRNAs are already detectable in pachytene spermatocytes, and their level increases in round spermatids, a pattern resembling that of the testis-specific phosphoglycerate kinase 2 gene (PGK2) (48). In conclusion, the novel gene 111-450 is transcribed in pachytene spermatocytes and spermatids.
Sequence Analyses of 111-450 cDNAsThe yeast results
predicted that the testis-specific cDNA in pGAD-450 harbors a
leucine zipper motif. We initially determined the nucleotide sequence
of the pGAD-450 insert, which was compared with entries in the GenBank
data base. The partial pGAD-450 cDNA sequence appeared to be
homologous to two expressed sequence tags, mouse MMTEST128 that is
expressed in spermatocytes and spermatids (49) and EST111685 isolated
from PC12 cells that were induced to differentiate to neurons by nerve
growth factor (50), and to the unpublished GenBank entry RN1414 that
was isolated from a spermatocyte phage cDNA library. The testicular
expression patterns reported for the MMTEST128 fragment was thus
identical to that of gene 111-450. We next screened a rat testis
directional phage library using the insert of clone pGAD-450 and
isolated 111-450 cDNAs harboring the complete open reading
frame.
Fig. 4 shows the predicted protein sequence of the open
reading frame encoded by 111-450 cDNAs. This latter protein
sequence is shown in a comparison with the predicted RN1414 protein
sequence. Our 111-450 protein sequence is similar but not identical to
the predicted RN1414 protein sequence. Fig. 4 indicates the unique 111-450 amino acid residues 1-36, several conserved amino acid changes
(indicated by dots) as well as a region only present in RN1414 (RN1414 residues 180-202). The molecular weight for the predicted 111-450 protein is 72,000. Importantly, the 111-450 protein
contains two putative C-terminal leucine zippers (leucine residues are
bold and underlined in Fig. 4), only one of which (the upstream one) was present in the original pGAD-450 cDNA clone isolated in the yeast two-hybrid screen (as indicated in Fig. 4).
Protein Interactions between Odf27 and the Gene 111-450 Product Is Mediated by the Upstream 111-450 Leucine Zipper
To investigate the involvement of the putative leucine zippers in the interaction of Odf27 with gene 111-450 product and to analyze the specificity of these interactions, the following experiments were carried out. The interaction of gene 111-450 product with itself was tested and compared with its interaction with Odf27. The result is shown in Fig. 1, panel B. Gene 111-450 protein clearly cannot associate with itself (area 2) but strongly interacts with Odf27 (area 1). We then mutated each of the four leucine residues in the upstream leucine zipper of 111-450 protein that was present in the pGAD-450 insert (see "Experimental Procedures"). The mutant 111-450 proteins were tested for interaction with Odf27 in yeast. Fig. 1, panel C, shows that wild type 111-450 interacts with Odf27 (area wt) as expected. Mutation of any of the leucine residues abolished this association completely (areas 1-4). Thus, each of the four leucine residues of the upstream leucine zipper of 111-450 protein as well as the Odf27 leucine zipper (Fig. 1A) are critically involved in the interaction between 111-450 and Odf27 proteins.
111-450 Protein Localizes to the ODFTo analyze the 111-450 protein expression pattern in male germ cells, we raised polyclonal
antibodies against an MBP-450 fusion protein that were used in
immunofluorescence analysis of frozen sections of rat testis. The
results are shown in Fig. 5, panels A-C.
Protein 111-450 staining was only detectable in tails of elongating
spermatids (panel C). No other cells within seminiferous tubules produced 111-450 protein, including pachytene spermatocytes that do transcribe the 111-450 gene. The 111-450 protein expression pattern was compared with that of Odf27 and found to be essentially identical (panel B). The localization of 111-450 protein was
also investigated by immunofluorescence analysis of isolated epididymal spermatozoa (Fig. 5, panels D-F). Staining of spermatozoa
using the same antibodies demonstrated that both 111-450 protein
(panel F) and Odf27 (panel E) localize to sperm
tails. This result suggested that 111-450 protein could be a component
of either ODF or FS (note that Odf27 is only present in ODF).
To distinguish these possibilities we examined 111-450 protein
localization in sections of sperm tails by immunoelectron microscopy. The anti-450 antibodies described above were used. Cross-sections were
prepared from tails of rat spermatozoa at the midpiece, the principal
piece, and the endpiece. We also examined the distribution of 111-450 protein in longitudinal sections through sperm tails. The results of
these experiments are shown in Fig. 6, panels
A and B. The electron micrographs in panel A
show that in cross-sections 111-450 protein is evenly distributed in
the nine ODF (odf) in the midpiece and in the seven ODF in
the principal piece. 111-450 protein is not detectable in the FS
(fs), the mitochondrial sheath (m), or the
axoneme (ax). These results are confirmed by the analysis of
longitudinal sections (panel B), which show that 111-450 protein localizes to the ODF and is absent from the other major tail
structures. We conclude that the gene 111-450 encodes an outer dense
fiber protein.
Gene 111-450 Encodes the 84-kDa Major Outer Dense Fiber Protein
Initial protein characterizations and the localization of
the 111-450 protein to ODF indicated the possibility that gene 111-450 could encode Odf84, one of the major ODF proteins. To identify the gene
111-450 product, we performed the following assays. First, we used
anti-450 antiserum in a Western blotting analysis of isolated ODF
proteins and compared the results with those obtained using affinity
purified anti-Odf84 antibodies. The results shown in Fig.
7 indicate that both antisera recognize the same
proteins of 84, 71, 40, 56, and 27 kDa, in descending order of strength (lanes 3 and 4), in spite of their completely
independent generation. No ODF proteins were recognized by preimmune
sera (lane 2). This result strongly suggested that gene
111-450 encodes Odf84.
In a second approach we analyzed the in vitro translation products of 111-450 cDNA by anti-450 antibodies and by affinity purified anti-Odf84 antibodies. This assay shows (Fig. 7) that a 2.1-kb 111-450 cDNA, which harbors the open reading frame shown in Fig. 4, encodes a protein with an apparent molecular weight of 82,000 on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (lane 6) that is recognized by both anti-450 antibodies and anti-Odf84 antibodies (lanes 9 and 12, respectively). The products of included negative controls, 55-800 and 69-1400 cDNAs (lanes 7 and 8, respectively), are not recognized by these antisera (lanes 10, 13, and 11, 14, respectively), as expected. The smaller 111-450 encoded products detected in this assay likely derive from internal translation start sites. Taken together with the immunoelectron microscopy studies we conclude that gene 111-450 encodes the major outer dense fiber protein Odf84.
Sperm tail ODF are composed of several proteins that can be divided into major and minor classes based upon abundance. From previous analyses it became apparent that the nine ODF in the midpiece and the remaining seven ODF in the principal piece each have a distinguishable, characteristic shape, contain a cortex surrounding a medulla, and are highly insoluble. Many of the major ODF proteins (as well as many of the FS proteins) are specifically produced in elongating spermatids and are thus likely encoded by testis-specific genes (14, 51). As a consequence the elongating spermatid is faced with several problems that need resolution; all required ODF proteins need to be synthesized at the appropriate time and in the appropriate amounts. Furthermore, since the proteins that constitute the mature ODF are highly insoluble, the elongating spermatid must provide an environment to synthesize and store these proteins in a solubilized state and then transport them to the assembly points of the developing ODF. In support of a possible storage, granular bodies have been observed in elongating spermatids at a time of maximal production of ODF proteins, and these bodies are near exclusive depots of ODF proteins, including Odf84, in the cytoplasm (52). At later stages that coincide with maximal ODF assembly the number of these granular bodies declines. Finally, in order to ensure sufficient stocks of ODF protein for assembly, elongating spermatids appear to produce an excess of the required proteins, which still in granular form are recycled in residual bodies (52). It is therefore reasonable to propose an important role for ODF protein interactions in at least two stages as follows: interactions that occur (a) during synthesis to store ODF proteins in a soluble state (perhaps with the aid of unidentified chaperons) and (b) during ODF assembly to determine the mature ODF structure. The possibilities to investigate these points have been poor due to the lack of cloned ODF proteins, and the nature of the motifs involved in ODF protein interactions cannot be addressed directly due to their insolubility.
We demonstrate here that the leucine zipper motif of the outer dense fiber protein Odf27 can be successfully used to clone a novel testis-specific gene based on an interaction screen in yeast. We identify the novel product as the major outer dense fiber protein Odf84. Odf84 harbors two leucine zippers, one of which strongly and specifically interacts with Odf27.
A Leucine Zipper from a Structural Protein as Bait in the Yeast Two-hybrid SystemSince only Odf27 had been cloned, we planned to
isolate cDNAs of new member(s) of the family of structural
testis-specific proteins to identify molecular determinants of protein
interactions that play a role in ODF morphogenesis. To increase the
likelihood of obtaining proteins relevant to Odf27 and its function, we
decided to exploit our previous Odf27 structural predictions of a
leucine zipper motif in a yeast two-hybrid system, rather than screen testis cDNA libraries by subtractive procedures. The latter
approach can result in the isolation of testis-specific proteins, but
they would be of unknown relevance to Odf27 biology. We thus used an Odf27 N-terminal fragment, which harbors a leucine zipper (26, 37), to
isolate testicular proteins that could interact with Odf27 in a yeast
two-hybrid system. The cDNA library used was made from rat total
testis mRNA and as a consequence contained leucine zipper proteins
derived from germ cells and somatic cells (among others the bZIP
proteins Creb (53) and Crem (54)). Interestingly, we did not isolate
members of the bZIP family of transcription factors in this screen but
instead obtained cDNA for gene 111-450 that we showed encodes the
84-kDa major outer dense fiber protein. We demonstrated that the
interaction between Odf27 and Odf84 depends entirely and exclusively
upon their leucine zippers. Odf84 interacts with Odf27 but does not
self-associate. These results demonstrate that the leucine zipper motif
can be successfully employed as bait in the yeast two-hybrid system to isolate interacting proteins. This conclusion is further substantiated by our recent results2 where we isolated
another testis-specific gene that strongly interacts with the Odf27
leucine zipper and that encodes a protein that also specifically
localizes to sperm tails.
The characterization of Odf84 as the protein product encoded by gene 111-450 was based on the following evidence. Affinity purified anti-Odf84 antibodies recognize specifically the 82-kDa product encoded by a 2.1-kb 111-450 cDNA in immunoprecipitation experiments. Furthermore, antibodies raised against protein 111-450 and affinity purified anti-Odf84 antibodies display identical patterns in Western blot analyses of isolated ODF proteins. Finally and importantly, the product of gene 111-450 localizes to the outer dense fibers as determined by immunoelectron microscopy. We do not yet know why other smaller ODF proteins are also recognized by anti-Odf84 antisera in in vitro translation/immunoprecipitation assays and Western blot assays: possibly, translation of one or more of these smaller proteins initiates at internal AUG codons on 111-450 mRNA. Alternatively, smaller proteins may result from processing of the initial translation product. A less likely possibility is that the antibodies raised against the 111-450 product and the affinity purified anti-Odf84 antibodies cross-react with some of the other ODF proteins.
In preliminary experiments we observed that in vitro
translation of RNA derived from 111-450 cDNAs that are
approximately 2 kb in size or larger results in the synthesis of the
82-kDa protein and that this product co-migrates on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with Odf84 translated from testicular
polyadenylated mRNAs.2 The in vitro
translation efficiency of 111-450 cDNAs larger than 2.1 kb (up to
the near full-length 3.1 kb cDNA) rapidly drops, but the size of
products synthesized remains the same, viz. 82 kDa. At
present we do not know why the 111-450 gene product, which has a
predicted molecular weight of 72,000, migrates in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis conditions as an 82-kDa protein. Our preliminary translation data thus indicate that the 5-UTR of 111-450 mRNA decreases translational efficiency in vitro and raise the
possibilities of (i) translational control by the 5
-UTR (see below)
and (ii) a role for the smaller testicular 2.1-kb 111-450 mRNA in
the synthesis of Odf84.
Interestingly, sequence analysis of Odf84 cDNA predicted the presence of two putative leucine zipper motifs in the C-terminal region of the protein, only one of which, the upstream leucine zipper, was present in the original pGAD-450 cDNA (Fig. 4). Site-directed mutagenesis of any one of the four leucine residues in the upstream Odf84 leucine zipper abolished interaction with Odf27. Thus, Odf27 and Odf84 co-localize and strongly interact via their leucine zippers. However, they differ with respect to interacting partners; whereas Odf84 can only associate with Odf27, Odf27 can associate to a limited extent with itself (37). This finding has implications for the model of ODF protein interactions described below.
The RNA expression pattern of gene 111-450 is interesting and differs
from that of Odf27. Odf84 mRNA is detectable in meiotic, pachytene
spermatocytes and accumulates further in round spermatids, whereas
Odf27 mRNA is exclusively synthesized in round spermatids. Odf84
protein is, however, only detectable in elongating spermatids (similar
to Odf27 protein expression). Odf84 mRNA expression resembles that
of PGK2, but PGK2 protein is synthesized in both spermatocytes and
spermatids. This suggests that Odf84 mRNA is subject to
translational repression in both spermatocytes and round spermatids.
This level of gene regulation has been described before for several
spermatid-specific genes (reviewed in Ref. 55), including the protamine
genes mP1 and mP2 (56, 57), but not for genes
transcribed in spermatocytes. Translational regulation of
mP1 mRNA results from the action of cis-acting sequences
in the 3-untranslated region (UTR) (56). Sequences in the 3
-UTR can
interact with proteins (58-60) one of which was recently cloned and
fulfills the criteria predicted for a translational repressor protein
(61). Recently, the translation regulation of a spermatid-specific
mRNA derived from the superoxide dismutase gene
(Tsod-1) was shown to be mediated by sequences in the
5
-UTR (62). The physiological role for translational control has been
well established; elongating spermatids undergo nuclear condensation
and transcription is shut off in these cells. mRNAs for products
required late during spermatogenesis must therefore be produced in
round spermatids, and translational repression of such mRNAs is
essential for the correct timing of synthesis of involved proteins.
Indeed, premature translation of mP1 is detrimental to
spermatogenesis (63). The basis for Odf84 translational control in
spermatocytes and round spermatids remains to be investigated and could
involve the long 5
-UTR.
An intriguing fact is the homology of gene odf84 mRNA to an expressed sequence tags isolated by PCR from PC12 cells induced to differentiate into neurons (50). We have not been able to repeat these findings using P19 embryonal carcinoma cells, which can be differentiated into neuronal lineages by retinoic acid. It is interesting, however, to note that a number of genes appear to be expressed specifically in the brain and in male germ cells.
A Model for Odf27 and Odf84 in ODF StructuresThe
co-localization of the Odf27 and Odf84 proteins, their abundance, their
highly specific and strong association via leucine zippers, and the
presence of another motif, the PCX repeats in Odf27 (27),
suggested that these proteins likely form a molecular network
underlying the ODF structure with which other ODF proteins associate.
Fig. 8 schematically presents two models to describe protein interactions in ODF. In the model shown in Fig. 8, model A, Odf27 self-associates via its PCX repeats (evidence
in support of which is discussed below); one Odf27 molecule interacts
with Odf84 and the second one with protein X which can be
Odf27 itself, Odf84, or an unidentified protein. In this model Odf84
interacts via its second, putative leucine zipper with protein
Y. Protein Y is unidentified but cannot be Odf27
or Odf84 itself based on the interaction studies that we carried out.
The binding of proteins to the second, putative Odf84 leucine zipper
can be analyzed in a yeast two-hybrid system as described here. In a
second model (Fig. 8, model B) Odf27 interacts with Odf84
via its leucine zipper (as described in the first model) and with an
unidentified protein Z via its PCX repeats;
Z is not Odf27. The crucial feature of these models is the
leucine zipper motif that organizes the various proteins.
A functional role for the Odf27 PCX repeats is supported by the analysis of mutations in genes belonging to the Drosophila multigene Mst(3)PCG family, which encodes seven male germ line-specific proteins (33). These proteins localize to satellite fibers in Drosophila spermatozoa, considered functional homologs of mammalian ODF (36). A homozygous deletion of four of these genes (located in cluster 84D) caused a 2-fold decrease in sperm production, and examination of spermatozoa revealed numerous malformations (35). The evolutionary conservation of the PCX repeats in male germ cell-specific proteins and the similar regulation of expression and localization of Odf27 and Mst(3)PCG proteins supports an important role for these repeats in mammalian ODF. We also determined recently in a yeast two-hybrid approach and in in vitro experiments that the PCX repeats mediate Odf27 self-association (37). Computer analysis predicted that these repeats could form coiled coils. Taken together, these observations lend support to the first model, presented in Fig. 8, model A, which we favor: it is based on the available experimental data concerning the Odf27 leucine zipper and PCX repeat domains. Of course the presented models are subject to variations, e.g. the Odf27 gene also encodes a minor protein of 20 kDa that contains the PCX repeats but lacks the leucine zipper and would limit the branching opportunity provided by the full-length Odf27 molecule. A direct demonstration of protein interactions in isolated ODF is not possible due to the insoluble nature of these proteins; however, the availability of the novel cDNAs and our identification of the crucial dimerization domain will allow us to confirm such interactions in transgenic mice and study the consequences of disruption of these interactions on sperm tail development.
In conclusion, our data demonstrate that specific interactions between two testis-specific cytoskeletal proteins exist and that these are mediated by leucine zipper motifs.