Abstract

Gonadotropin Regulated Testicular Helicase (GRTH/DDX25) is member of the DEAD-box family of RNA helicases present in Leydig and germ cells. GRTH is the only family member regulated by hormones, luteinizing hormone, through androgen action. Male mice with knock-out of the GRTH gene are sterile, lack sperm with arrest at round spermatids. GRTH participates on the nuclear export and transport of specific mRNAs, the structural integrity of Chromatoid Bodies of round spermatids, where mRNAs are processed and stored, and in their transit to polyribosomes, where it may regulate translation of relevant genes. GRTH has a central role in the control of germ cell apoptosis and acts as negative regulator of miRNAs which regulate expression of genes involved in the progress of spermatogenesis. In Leydig cells, GRTH gene transcription is regulated by LH via autocrine actions of androgen/androgen receptor and has regulatory effects in steroidogenesis. In germ cells, androgen actions are indirect via receptors in Sertoli cells. Transgenic mice carrying GRTH 5′ flanking region-GFP permitted to discern regions in the gene which directs its expression upstream, in germ cells, and downstream in Leydig cells, and the androgen-regulated transcription at interstitial (autocrine), and germ cell (paracrine) compartments. Further evidence for paracrine actions of androgen/androgen receptor is their transcriptional induction of Germ Cell Nuclear Factor as requisite up-regulator of GRTH gene transcription in round spermatids, linking androgen action to two relevant germ cell genes essential for the progress of spermatogenesis. A missense mutation of R to H at amino acid 242 of GRTH found in 5.8% of a patient population with azoospermia causes loss of the cytoplasmic phospho-GRTH species with preservation of the non-phospho form in transfected cells. Mice with knock-in of the human mutation, lack sperm due to arrest at round spermatids. This model permits to discern the function of phospho-GRTH. The GRTH phospho-site resides at a Threonine structurally adjacent to the mutant site found in patients. Molecular modeling of this site elucidated the amino acids that form the GRTH/PKA interphase and provide the basis for drug design for use as male contraceptive.

Highlights

  • Gonadotropin regulated testicular RNA helicase (GRTH) has a central role in the control of germ cell apoptosis and acts as negative regulator of miRNAs which regulate expression of genes involved in the progress of spermatogenesis

  • Further evidence for paracrine actions of androgen/androgen receptor is their transcriptional induction of Germ Cell Nuclear Factor as requisite up-regulator of GRTH gene transcription in round spermatids, linking androgen action to two relevant germ cell genes essential for the progress of spermatogenesis

  • The expression of GRTH by androgen is regulated by androgen/AR acting in Sertoli cell which in a paracrine fashion regulate GRTH transcription through a yet to be identified signal(s) relayed to germ cells. This is accomplished by the participation of the transcription factor GCNF (Germ Cell Nuclear Factor) whose expression is regulated by androgen in round spermatids

Read more

Summary

DISCOVERY AND EARLY STUDIES

Gonadotropin regulated testicular RNA helicase (GRTH) was discovered in this laboratory in 1999 [1] as a result of screening for LH/hCG responsive genes using differential displayed analysis of RNAs from cultured rat Leydig cells stimulated by high concentrations of gonadotropin. It has 64% amino acid identity with DBP5/DDX19 (human/mouse/yeast) which is ubiquitously expressed, associates with nuclear pore complex [9,10,11] and is required for RNA poly (A) export function (Figure 1B) It displays considerably less similarity (41–42%) to initiation factors of the translation complex, eIF4AI,II/DDX2A,B [12] and only 32–34% to other germ cells DEAD-box RNA helicase proteins including, An3 which is expressed throughout oogenesis, embryogenesis and adult life and colocalizes with nucleoli in Xenopus laevis oocytes [13], Ded1p/PL10 (S. cerevisiae/mouse) require for translation [14] and Vasa/mVH/DDX4, a DEAD-box helicase family member essential for male germ cell development and oogenesis in Drosophila [15]. With our present knowledge the 43 kDa form is not expected to reside in the nucleus or engaged in transport of messages, but perhaps its actions are confined to translational process of mRNAs

CELLULAR DEVELOPMENTAL EXPRESSION OF GRTH IN THE TESTIS
Apoptosis RNA Transport
RNA Degradation
GRTH in microRNA Regulation
Findings
Role in Apoptosis
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call