Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.310, No.4, 1155-1159, 2003
Sperm motility-activating complex formed by t-complex distorters
Transmission ratio distortion is a dramatic example of non-Mendelian transmission. In mice, t-haplotype males produce dysfunctional +-sperm and normal t-sperm, leading to transmission in favor of t-sperm. Genetic studies have indicated that the t-complex responder locus, Tcr, rescues t-sperm but not +-sperm from defective products of t-complex distorter loci, Tcds. Light chain 1 (LC1) and LC3 from sea urchin sperm outer arm dynein have sequence similarities to Tctex2 and Tctex1, respectively, both of which are wild-type products of Tcds. We show here that LC1 and LC3 are able to make a 1:1 complex. Since Tcr is a member of the Smok (sperm motility kinase) family and LC1 is phosphorylated at the activation of sperm motility in a cAMP-dependent manner, this complex in a dynein motor molecule might be a direct target of Smok/Tcr kinase in a signal cascade that regulates sperm motility. Thus. we designate it as Smoac (sperm motility activating complex). (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:transmission ratio distortion;t-complex distorter;Tctex1;Tctex2;dynein;light chain;signal cascade;sperm motility;protein-protein interaction;two-hybrid system