Artigo Revisado por pares

Identification of Proteins Involved in Human Sperm Motility Using High-Throughput Differential Proteomics

2014; American Chemical Society; Volume: 13; Issue: 12 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/pr500652y

ISSN

1535-3907

Autores

Alexandra Amaral, Carla Paiva, Claudio Attardo Parrinello, Josep Marı́a Estanyol, Josep Lluís Ballescà, João Ramalho‐Santos, Rafael Oliva,

Tópico(s)

Hormonal and reproductive studies

Resumo

Mammalian sperm motility is a prerequisite for in vivo fertilization, and alterations in this parameter are commonly observed in infertile males. However, we still do not have a complete understanding of the molecular mechanisms controlling it. The aim of this study was to identify proteins involved in human sperm motility deficiency by using TMT protein labeling and LC-MS/MS. Two complementary approaches were used: comparison between sperm samples differing in motility (asthenozoospermic versus normozoospermic) and comparison between sperm subpopulations of fractionated normozoospermic samples differing in motility (non-migrated versus migrated). LC-MS/MS resulted in the identification of 1157 and 887 proteins in the first and second approaches, respectively. Remarkably, similar proteomic alterations were detected in the two experiments, with 80 proteins differentially expressed in the two groups of samples and 93 differentially expressed in the two groups of subpopulations. The differential proteins were analyzed by GO, cellular pathways, and clustering analyses and resulted in the identification of core deregulated proteins and pathways associated with sperm motility dysfunction. These included proteins associated with energetic metabolism, protein folding/degradation, vesicle trafficking, and the cytoskeleton. Contrary to what is usually accepted, the outcomes support the hypothesis that several metabolic pathways (notably, mitochondrial-related ones) contribute toward regulating sperm motility.

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