Inactivation of a testis-specific Lis1 transcript in mice prevents spermatid differentiation and causes male infertility

2003 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Inactivation of a testis-specific Lis1 transcript in mice prevents spermatid differentiation and causes male infertility​
Nayernia, K.; Vauti, F.; Meinhardt, A.; Cadenas, C.; Schweyer, S.; Meyer, B. I. & Schwandt, I. et al.​ (2003) 
Journal of Biological Chemistry278(48) pp. 48377​-48385​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M309583200 

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Authors
Nayernia, K.; Vauti, F.; Meinhardt, Andreas; Cadenas, C.; Schweyer, Stefan; Meyer, Barbara I.; Schwandt, I.; Chowdhury, K.; Engel, Wolfgang; Arnold, H. H.
Abstract
Lis1 protein is the non-catalytic component of platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase 1b (PAF-AH 1B) and associated with microtubular structures. Hemizygous mutations of the LIS1 gene cause type I lissencephaly, a brain abnormality with developmental defects of neuronal migration. Lis1 is also expressed in testis, but its function there has not been determined. We have generated a mouse mutant (LIS1(GT/GT)) by gene trap integration leading to selective disruption of a Lis1 splicing variant in testis. Homozygous mutant males are infertile with no other apparent phenotype. We demonstrate that Lis1 is predominantly expressed in spermatids, and spermiogenesis is blocked when Lis1 is absent. Mutant spermatids fail to form correct acrosomes and nuclei appear distorted in size and shape. The tissue architecture in mutant testis appears severely disturbed displaying collapsed seminiferous tubules, mislocated germ cells, and increased apoptosis. These results provide evidence for an essential and hitherto uncharacterized role of the Lis1 protein in spermatogenesis, particularly in the differentiation of spermatids into spermatozoa.
Issue Date
2003
Status
published
Publisher
Amer Soc Biochemistry Molecular Biology Inc
Journal
Journal of Biological Chemistry 
ISSN
0021-9258

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