Abstract
Transition proteins and protamines are highly basic sperm-specific nuclear proteins that serve to compact the DNA during late spermiogenesis. To understand their sequential role in this function, transition protein 1 (TP1), transition protein 2 (TP2), and protamine 1 (P1) were assayed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in pools of microdissected, staged seminiferous tubule segments in the rat. The results were compared with immunocytochemical analyses of squash preparations from accurately identified stages of the epithelial cycle. TP2 was the first to appear as a faint band at stages IX–XI, followed by high levels at stages XII–XIV of the cycle. TP1 showed a low expression at stage XII of the cycle and peaked at stages XIII–I, whereas protamine 1 first appeared at stage I of the cycle and remained high throughout the rest of spermiogenesis. Immunocytochemical analyses and Western blots largely confirmed these results: TP2 in steps 9–14, TP1 in steps 12–15, and P1 from late step 11 to step 19 of spermiogenesis. We propose that TP2 is the first nucleoprotein that replaces histones from the spermatid nucleus, and its appearance is associated with the onset of nuclear elongation. TP1 shows up along with the compaction of the chromatin. The two transition proteins seem to have distinct roles during transformation of the nuclei and compaction of spermatid DNA.
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