Abstract

Males have evolved species-specifical sperm morphology and swimming patterns to adapt to different fertilization environments. In eutherians, only a small fraction of the sperm overcome the diverse obstacles in the female reproductive tract and successfully migrate to the fertilizing site. Sperm arriving at the fertilizing site show hyperactivated motility, a unique motility pattern displaying asymmetric beating of sperm flagella with increased amplitude. This motility change is triggered by Ca2+ influx through the sperm-specific ion channel, CatSper. However, the current understanding of the CatSper function and its molecular regulation is limited in eutherians. Here, we report molecular evolution and conservation of the CatSper channel in the genome throughout eutherians and marsupials. Sequence analyses reveal that CatSper proteins are slowly evolved in marsupials. Using an American marsupial, gray short-tailed opossum (Monodelphis domestica), we demonstrate the expression of CatSper in testes and its function in hyperactivation and unpairing of sperm. We demonstrate that a conserved IQ-like motif in CatSperζ is required for CatSperζ interaction with the pH-tuned Ca2+ sensor, EFCAB9, for regulating CatSper activity. Recombinant opossum EFCAB9 can interact with mouse CatSperζ despite high sequence divergence of CatSperζ among CatSper subunits in therians. Our finding suggests that molecular characteristics and functions of CatSper are evolutionarily conserved in gray short-tailed opossum, unraveling the significance of sperm hyperactivation and fertilization in marsupials for the first time.

Highlights

  • To win the competition between male rivals over females and breed successfully [1], males have evolved unique reproductive strategies

  • All these results indicate that CatSper proteins have evolved rapidly in rodents but slowly in the Tasmanian devil; marsupial CatSper proteins might have conserved physiological functions and molecular characteristics inherited from common ancestors of therian mammals

  • Sperm from American marsupials, including the gray short-tailed opossum, are paired during epididymal maturation (Figure 2; [31,32]), which is distinct from the unpaired epididymal sperm in Australian marsupials and eutherians

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Summary

Introduction

To win the competition between male rivals over females and breed successfully [1], males have evolved unique reproductive strategies. Mammalian males have evolved increased sperm numbers in their ejaculate to overcome the physical, chemical, and anatomical obstacles in the female reproductive tract; acidic environment near the vagina, cervical mucus, fluid flow in the uterine and the oviduct, narrow path of the uterotubal junction (UTJ), and/or the immune systems limit the number of sperm cells to reach to the fertilizing sites [3,4]. Sperm hyperactivation is reported in eutherian and monotreme species [12] but not in non-mammalian vertebrates. These results suggest that sperm hyperactivation is a shared physiological event in mammalian fertilization. The extent to which hyperactivated motility is conserved and its regulation and function have diverged in mammal fertilization is still not well studied

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