CLPP Depletion Causes Diplotene Arrest; Underlying Testis Mitochondrial Dysfunction Occurs with Accumulation of Perrault Proteins ERAL1, PEO1, and HARS2.
Jana KeySuzana GispertLieke KoornneefEsther Sleddens-LinkelsAneesha KohliSylvia Torres-OdioGabriele KoepfShady AmrMarina ReichlmeirPatrick N HarterAndrew Phillip WestChristian MünchWilly M BaarendsGeorg AuburgerPublished in: Cells (2022)
Human Perrault syndrome (PRLTS) is autosomal, recessively inherited, and characterized by ovarian insufficiency with hearing loss. Among the genetic causes are mutations of matrix peptidase CLPP, which trigger additional azoospermia. Here, we analyzed the impact of CLPP deficiency on male mouse meiosis stages. Histology, immunocytology, different OMICS and biochemical approaches, and RT-qPCR were employed in CLPP-null mouse testis. Meiotic chromosome pairing and synapsis proceeded normally. However, the foci number of the crossover marker MLH1 was slightly reduced, and foci persisted in diplotene, most likely due to premature desynapsis, associated with an accumulation of the DNA damage marker γH2AX. No meiotic M-phase cells were detected. Proteome profiles identified strong deficits of proteins involved in male meiotic prophase (HSPA2, SHCBP1L, DMRT7, and HSF5), versus an accumulation of AURKAIP1. Histone H3 cleavage, mtDNA extrusion, and cGAMP increase suggested innate immunity activation. However, the deletion of downstream STING/IFNAR failed to alleviate pathology. As markers of underlying mitochondrial pathology, we observed an accumulation of PRLTS proteins ERAL1, PEO1, and HARS2. We propose that the loss of CLPP leads to the extrusion of mitochondrial nucleotide-binding proteins to cytosol and nucleus, affecting late meiotic prophase progression, and causing cell death prior to M-phase entry. This phenotype is more severe than in mito-mice or mutator-mice.
Keyphrases
- dna damage
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- cell cycle arrest
- copy number
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- hearing loss
- high fat diet induced
- traumatic brain injury
- heat shock protein
- clinical trial
- mitochondrial dna
- early onset
- dna repair
- randomized controlled trial
- case report
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- gene expression
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- adipose tissue
- germ cell
- heat shock
- pluripotent stem cells
- pi k akt
- study protocol
- heat stress