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The Protein Phosphorylation Landscape of Mouse Spermatids during Spermiogenesis.

Yan LiYiwei ChengTianyu ZhuHao ZhangWen LiYueshuai GuoYaling QiXu ChenJun ZhangJiahao ShaZuomin ZhouHui ZhuXue-Jiang Guo
Published in: Proteomics (2019)
The characteristic tadpole shape of sperm is formed from round spermatids via spermiogenesis, a process which results in dramatic morphological changes in the final stage of spermatogenesis in the testis. Protein phosphorylation, as one of the most important post-translational modifications, can regulate spermiogenesis; however, the phosphorylation events taking place during this process have not been systematically analyzed. In order to better understand the role of phosphorylation in spermiogenesis, large-scale phosphoproteome profiling is performed using IMAC and TiO2 enrichment. In total, 13 835 phosphorylation sites, in 4196 phosphoproteins, are identified in purified mouse spermatids undergoing spermiogenesis in two biological replicates. Overall, 735 testis-specific proteins are identified to be phosphorylated, and are expressed at high levels during spermiogenesis. Gene ontology analysis shows enrichment of the identified phosphoproteins in terms of histone modification, cilium organization, centrosome and the adherens junction. Further characterization of the kinase-substrate phosphorylation network demonstrates enrichment of phosphorylation substrates related to the regulation of spermiogenesis. This global protein phosphorylation landscape of spermiogenesis shows wide phosphoregulation across a diverse range of processes during spermiogenesis and can help to further characterize the process of sperm generation. All MS data are available via ProteomeXchange with the identifier PXD011890.
Keyphrases
  • protein kinase
  • single cell
  • dna methylation
  • mass spectrometry
  • gene expression
  • protein protein
  • ms ms
  • small molecule
  • electronic health record
  • network analysis