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Sperm chromatin structure and reproductive fitness are altered by substitution of a single amino acid in mouse protamine 1.

Lindsay MoritzSamantha B SchonMashiat RabbaniYi ShengRitvija AgrawalJuniper Glass-KlaiberCaleb SultanJeannie M CamarilloJourdan ClementsMichael R BaldwinAdam G DiehlAlan P BoylePatrick J O'BrienKaushik RagunathanYueh-Chiang HuMichael P SnyderJayakrishnan NandakumarJun Z LiKyle E OrwigSy ReddingSaher Sue Hammoud
Published in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2023)
Conventional dogma presumes that protamine-mediated DNA compaction in sperm is achieved by electrostatic interactions between DNA and the arginine-rich core of protamines. Phylogenetic analysis reveals several non-arginine residues conserved within, but not across species. The significance of these residues and their post-translational modifications are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the role of K49, a rodent-specific lysine residue in protamine 1 (P1) that is acetylated early in spermiogenesis and retained in sperm. In sperm, alanine substitution (P1(K49A)) decreases sperm motility and male fertility-defects that are not rescued by arginine substitution (P1(K49R)). In zygotes, P1(K49A) leads to premature male pronuclear decompaction, altered DNA replication, and embryonic arrest. In vitro, P1(K49A) decreases protamine-DNA binding and alters DNA compaction and decompaction kinetics. Hence, a single amino acid substitution outside the P1 arginine core is sufficient to profoundly alter protein function and developmental outcomes, suggesting that protamine non-arginine residues are essential for reproductive fitness.
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