4.6 Article

Nuclear envelope remodelling during human spermiogenesis involves somatic B-type lamins and a spermatid-specific B3 lamin isoform

Journal

MOLECULAR HUMAN REPRODUCTION
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 225-236

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molehr/gau111

Keywords

nuclear lamina; lamins; spermiogenesis; human

Funding

  1. Agence de la biomedicine
  2. AOR 'AMP, diagnostic prenatal et diagnostic genetique'
  3. Inserm
  4. Aix-Marseille Universite
  5. ANR (Agence Nationale de la Recherche)
  6. Centre Hospitalier Universitaire of Toulouse
  7. APHM (Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Marseille)

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The nuclear lamina (NL) is a filamentous protein meshwork, composed essentially of lamins, situated between the inner nuclear membrane and the chromatin. There is mounting evidence that the NL plays a role in spermatid differentiation during spermiogenesis. The mouse spermatid NL is composed of the ubiquitous lamin B1 and the spermatid-specific lamin B3, an N-terminally truncated isoform of lamin B2. However, nothing is known about the NL in human spermatids. We therefore investigated the expression pattern and localization of A-type lamins (A, C and C2) and B-type lamins (B1, B2 and B3) during human spermiogenesis. Here, we show that a lamin B3 transcript is present in human spermatids and that B-type lamins are the only lamins detectable in human spermatids. We determine that, as shown for their mouse counterparts, human lamin B3, but not lamin B2, induces strong nuclear deformation, when ectopically expressed in HeLa cells. Coimmunofluorescence revealed that, in human spermatids, B-type lamins are present at the nuclear periphery, except in the region covered by the acrosome, and that as the spermatid matures the B-type lamins recede towards the posterior pole. Only lamin B1 remains detectable on 33-47% of ejaculated spermatozoa. On spermatozoa selected for normal head density, however, this fell to,6%, suggesting that loss of the NL signal may be linked to complete sperm nucleus compaction. The similarities revealed between lamin expression during human and rodent spermiogenesis, strengthen evidence that the NL and lamin B3 have conserved functions during the intense remodelling of the mammalian spermatid nucleus.

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