Abstract

Living organisms have evolved intricate systems to harvest trace elements from the environment, to control their intracellular levels, and to ensure adequate delivery to the various organs and cellular compartments. Copper is one of these trace elements. It is at the same time essential for life but also highly toxic, not least because it facilitates the generation of reactive oxygen species. In mammals, copper uptake in the intestine and copper delivery into other organs are mediated by the copper importer Ctr1. Drosophila has three Ctr1 homologs: Ctr1A, Ctr1B, and Ctr1C. Earlier work has shown that Ctr1A is an essential gene that is ubiquitously expressed throughout development, whereas Ctr1B is responsible for efficient copper uptake in the intestine. Here, we characterize the function of Ctr1C and show that it functions as a copper importer in the male germline, specifically in maturing spermatocytes and mature sperm. We further demonstrate that loss of Ctr1C in a Ctr1B mutant background results in progressive loss of male fertility that can be rescued by copper supplementation to the food. These findings hint at a link between copper and male fertility, which might also explain the high Ctr1 expression in mature mammalian spermatozoa. In both mammals and Drosophila, the X chromosome is known to be inactivated in the male germline. In accordance with such a scenario, we provide evidence that in Drosophila, the autosomal Ctr1C gene originated as a retrogene copy of the X-linked Ctr1A, thus maintaining copper delivery during male spermatogenesis.

Highlights

  • Copper is an essential nutrient for all eukaryotic organisms

  • Such flies could be rescued by growing them on food supplemented with the copper chelator bathocuproine disulfonate (BCS), which was comparable with the effects on viability of Ctr1A and Ctr1B overexpression (Fig. 1A)

  • Ctr1C Is a Bona Fide Copper Importer—In this study, we present a detailed characterization of Ctr1C, the third member of the Drosophila Ctr1 copper importer family

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Fly Culture—1 liter of standard fly food was composed of 55 g of corn, 10 g of wheat, 100 g of yeast, 75 g of glucose, 8 g of agar, and 15 ml of the antifungal agent nipagin (15% in ethanol). Flp-out Clones—UAS-Ctr1C(WT) UAS-GFP (see Fig. 2, A and B) and UAS-Ctr1C-FLAG UAS-GFP (see Fig. 2, C and D) clones were generated with the hs-flp actin-FRT-CD2-FRTGAL4 flp-out technique [26] With this technique, the expression of UAS transgenes can be induced with a heat shock in cell clones. At the end of the reaction, 400 ␮l of 1 M Na2CO3 was added, and the samples were centrifuged for 10 min at 13,000 anti-Ctr1C peptide

RESULTS
Spermatocyte Cysts and in Mature
DISCUSSION
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