The Fer Tyrosine Kinase Protects Sperm from Spontaneous Acrosome Reaction
Overview
Reproductive Medicine
Affiliations
The physiological acrosome reaction occurs after mammalian spermatozoa undergo a process called capacitation in the female reproductive tract. Only acrosome reacted spermatozoon can penetrate the egg zona-pellucida and fertilize the egg. Sperm also contain several mechanisms that protect it from undergoing spontaneous acrosome reaction (sAR), a process that can occur in sperm before reaching proximity to the egg and that abrogates fertilization. We previously showed that calmodulin-kinase II (CaMKII) and phospholipase D (PLD) are involved in preventing sAR through two distinct pathways that enhance F-actin formation during capacitation. Here, we describe a novel additional pathway involving the tyrosine kinase Fer in a mechanism that also prevents sAR by enhancing actin polymerization during sperm capacitation. We further show that protein-kinase A (PKA) and the tyrosine-kinase Src, as well as PLD, direct Fer phosphorylation/activation. Activated Fer inhibits the Ser/Thr phosphatase PP1, thereby leading to CaMKII activation, actin polymerization, and sAR inhibition.
Mechanisms That Protect Mammalian Sperm from the Spontaneous Acrosome Reaction.
Breitbart H, Grinshtein E Int J Mol Sci. 2023; 24(23).
PMID: 38069328 PMC: 10707520. DOI: 10.3390/ijms242317005.
Fer and FerT: A New Regulatory Link between Sperm and Cancer Cells.
Nir U, Grinshtain E, Breitbart H Int J Mol Sci. 2023; 24(6).
PMID: 36982326 PMC: 10049441. DOI: 10.3390/ijms24065256.