Zona occludens-2 is critical for blood-testis barrier integrity and male fertility.
Jianliang Xu, Farhana Anuar, Safiah Mohamed Ali, Mei Yong Ng, Dominic C Y Phua, Walter Hunziker
Index: Mol. Biol. Cell 20(20) , 4268-77, (2009)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Tight junction integral membrane proteins such as claudins and occludin are tethered to the actin cytoskeleton by adaptor proteins, notably the closely related zonula occludens (ZO) proteins ZO-1, ZO-2, and ZO-3. All three ZO proteins have recently been inactivated in mice. Although ZO-3 knockout mice lack an obvious phenotype, animals deficient in ZO-1 or ZO-2 show early embryonic lethality. Here, we rescue the embryonic lethality of ZO-2 knockout mice by injecting ZO-2(-/-) embryonic stem (ES) cells into wild-type blastocysts to generate viable ZO-2 chimera. ZO-2(-/-) ES cells contribute extensively to different tissues of the chimera, consistent with an extraembryonic requirement for ZO-2 rather than a critical role in epiblast development. Adult chimera present a set of phenotypes in different organs. In particular, male ZO-2 chimeras show reduced fertility and pathological changes in the testis. Lanthanum tracer experiments show a compromised blood-testis barrier. Expression levels of ZO-1, ZO-3, claudin-11, and occludin are not apparently affected. ZO-1 and occludin still localize to the blood-testis barrier region, but claudin-11 is less well restricted and the localization of connexin-43 is perturbed. The critical role of ZO-2 for male fertility and blood-testis barrier integrity thus provides a first example for a nonredundant role of an individual ZO protein in adult mice.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2015-06-01
[Biomed. Mater. 10 , 035005, (2015)]
Nanostructured La(Sr)CrO3 through gel combustion: sintering and electrical behavior.
2007-08-01
[J. Nanosci. Nanotechnol. 7(8) , 2904-8, (2007)]
2012-12-01
[Ultrasonics 52(8) , 1065-71, (2012)]
The role of chemical interactions between thorium, cerium, and lanthanum in lymphocyte toxicity.
2014-01-01
[Arch. Environ. Occup. Health 69(1) , 40-5, (2014)]
2006-05-01
[Shock 25(5) , 515-21, (2006)]