Interplay between p53 and Ink4c in spermatogenesis and fertility
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Taylor and Francis Inc.
Abstract
The tumor suppressor p53, and the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor Ink4c, have been both implicated in spermatogenesis control. Both p53-/- and Ink4c-/- single knockout male mice are fertile, despite testicular hypertrophy, Leydig cell differentiation defect, and increased sperm count in Ink4c-/- males. To investigate their collaborative roles, we studied p53-/- Ink4c-/- dual knockout animals, and found that male p53-/- Ink4c-/- mice have profoundly reduced fertility. Dual knockout male mice show a marked decrease in sperm count, abnormal sperm morphology and motility, prolongation of spermatozoa proliferation and delay of meiosis entry, and accumulation of DNA damage. Genetic studies showed that the effects of p53 loss on fertility are independent of its downstream effector Cdkn1a. Absence of p53 also partially reverses the hyperplasia seen upon Ink4c loss, and normalizes the Leydig cell differentiation defect. These results implicate p53 in mitigating both the delayed entry into meiosis and the secondary apoptotic response that occur in the absence of Ink4c. We conclude that the cell cycle genes p53 and Ink4c collaborate in sperm cell development and differentiation, and may be important candidates to investigate in human male infertility conditions. © 2018 Taylor & Francis.
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Infertility, P18 ink4c, P53, Spermatogenesis, Tumor suppressors, Animals, Apoptosis, Cell differentiation, Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p18, Dna damage, Fertility, Leydig cells, Male, Mice, Mice, inbred c57bl, Mice, knockout, Mitosis, Sperm count, Spermatids, Spermatozoa, Testis, Tumor suppressor protein p53, Cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 2c, Protein p53, Animal experiment, Animal tissue, Article, Cell hyperplasia, Histology, Immunohistochemistry, Leydig cell, Male infertility, Meiosis, Mouse, Nonhuman, Spermatogonium, Spermatozoon count, Spermatozoon motility, Subfertility, Testicular hypertrophy, Testis disease, Animal, C57bl mouse, Cytology, Genetics, Knockout mouse, Metabolism, Pathology, Spermatid, Spermatozoon