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PMID 22796355
Gene Name KRT10
Condition Asthenozoospermia
Association The data identified signature molecules that have the potential as biomarkers for diagnosing etiology of asthenozoospermia.
Sex Male
Infertility type Male infertility
Associated genes 66 phosphoproteins
Other associated phenotypes Asthenozoospermia


Sperm phosphoproteome profiling by ultra performance liquid chromatography followed by data independent analysis (LC-MS(E)) reveals altered proteomic signatures in asthenozoospermia

Parte PP, Rao P, Redij S, Lobo V, D'Souza SJ, Gajbhiye R, Kulkarni V.

Sperm motility is an important prerequisite for successful fertilization and is regulated by cyclic AMP activated protein kinase A which phosphorylates flagella proteins like axonemal dynein and initiates motility. Increase in calcium influx reverses this process by dephosphorylation that is mediated by calcineurin. Analyzing the phosphoenriched fractions of spermatozoa lysates from eight normozoospermic-, and asthenozoospermic-samples, respectively, by Nano UPLC-MS(E), the present study investigates the phosphoproteins involved in sperm motility in an attempt to identify the key pathways regulating sperm motility and likely to be altered in spermatozoa of asthenozoospermic individuals. 66 phosphoproteins were differentially regulated in asthenozoospermia. The deregulated proteins comprised predominantly the HSPs, cytoskeletal proteins, proteins associated with the fibrous sheath, and those associated with energy metabolism. EM analysis of these spermatozoa demonstrated significant defects in mitochondria, and fibrous sheath and these defects could be correlated with the altered proteome. Pathway analysis revealed that carbohydrate and energy metabolism, cAMP mediated PKA signaling, PI3K/AKT signaling and pathway regulating actin based motility by Rho were significantly altered indicating that motility in spermatozoa is regulated through the concerted effort of these pathways. The data identified signature molecules that have the potential as biomarkers for diagnosing etiology of asthenozoospermia. CI - Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. FAU - Parte, Priyanka P AU - Parte PP AD - Dept. of Gamete Immunobiology, National Institute for Research in Reproductive Health (ICMR), Mumbai, India. partep@nirrh.res.in FAU - Rao, Parimala AU - Rao P FAU - Redij, Shweta AU - Redij S FAU - Lobo, Vivian AU - Lobo V FAU - D'Souza, Serena J AU - D'Souza SJ FAU - Gajbhiye, Rahul AU - Gajbhiye R