Molecular dissection and testing of PRSS37 function through LC–MS/MS and the generation of a PRSS37 humanized mouse model

Author:

Sutton CourtneyORCID,Nozawa KaoriORCID,Kent KatarzynaORCID,Saltzman AlexanderORCID,Leng MeiORCID,Nagarajan SureshbabuORCID,Malovannaya AnnaORCID,Ikawa MasahitoORCID,Garcia Thomas X.ORCID,Matzuk Martin M.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe quest for a non-hormonal male contraceptive pill for men still exists. Serine protease 37 (PRSS37) is a sperm-specific protein that when ablated in mice renders them sterile. In this study we sought to examine the molecular sequelae of PRSS37 loss to better understand its molecular function, and to determine whether human PRSS37 could rescue the sterility phenotype of knockout (KO) mice, allowing for a more appropriate model for drug molecule testing. To this end, we used CRISPR-EZ to create mice lacking the entire coding region of Prss37, used pronuclear injection to create transgenic mice expressing human PRSS37, intercrossed these lines to generate humanized mice, and performed LC–MS/MS of KO and control tissues to identify proteomic perturbances that could attribute a molecular function to PRSS37. We found that our newly generated Prss37 KO mouse line is sterile, our human transgene rescues the sterility phenotype of KO mice, and our proteomics data not only yields novel insight into the proteome as it evolves along the male reproductive tract, but also demonstrates the proteins significantly influenced by PRSS37 loss. In summary, we report vast biological insight including insight into PRSS37 function and the generation of a novel tool for contraceptive evaluation.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Schepps Foundation

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Overseas Research Fellowship

Lalor Foundation

Dan L. Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center NIH

Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas

Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center

NIH High-End Instrumentation Award

National Institutes of Health

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Male Contraceptive Initiative David Skoal Innovation Award

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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