Absolute proteomic quantification reveals design principles of sperm flagellar chemosensation.
Christian TrötschelHussein HamzehLuis AlvarezRené PascalFedir LavrykWolfgang BönigkHeinz G KörschenAstrid MüllerAnsgar PoetschAndreas RennhackLong GuiDaniela NicastroTimo StrünkerReinhard SeifertU Benjamin KauppPublished in: The EMBO journal (2019)
Cilia serve as cellular antennae that translate sensory information into physiological responses. In the sperm flagellum, a single chemoattractant molecule can trigger a Ca2+ rise that controls motility. The mechanisms underlying such ultra-sensitivity are ill-defined. Here, we determine by mass spectrometry the copy number of nineteen chemosensory signaling proteins in sperm flagella from the sea urchin Arbacia punctulata. Proteins are up to 1,000-fold more abundant than the free cellular messengers cAMP, cGMP, H+ , and Ca2+ . Opto-chemical techniques show that high protein concentrations kinetically compartmentalize the flagellum: Within milliseconds, cGMP is relayed from the receptor guanylate cyclase to a cGMP-gated channel that serves as a perfect chemo-electrical transducer. cGMP is rapidly hydrolyzed, possibly via "substrate channeling" from the channel to the phosphodiesterase PDE5. The channel/PDE5 tandem encodes cGMP turnover rates rather than concentrations. The rate-detection mechanism allows continuous stimulus sampling over a wide dynamic range. The textbook notion of signal amplification-few enzyme molecules process many messenger molecules-does not hold for sperm flagella. Instead, high protein concentrations ascertain messenger detection. Similar mechanisms may occur in other small compartments like primary cilia or dendritic spines.
Keyphrases
- protein kinase
- nitric oxide
- copy number
- label free
- mass spectrometry
- mitochondrial dna
- binding protein
- genome wide
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- high resolution
- protein protein
- dna methylation
- real time pcr
- liquid chromatography
- gene expression
- bone mineral density
- biofilm formation
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- radiation therapy
- escherichia coli
- quantum dots
- staphylococcus aureus
- postmenopausal women
- gas chromatography
- capillary electrophoresis
- rectal cancer
- structural basis