Artículo de revista
The CatSper channel is present and plays a key role in sperm motility of the Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
Fecha
2020Registro en:
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A 241 (2020) 110634
10.1016/j.cbpa.2019.110634
Autor
Beltrán Lissabet, Jorge Félix
Herrera Belén, Lisandra
LeeEstevez, Manuel
Risopatrón, Jennie
Valdebenito, Iván
Figueroa, Elías
Farías, Jorge G.
Institución
Resumen
Among all the Ca2+ channels, CatSper channels have been one of the most studied in sperm of different species due to their demonstrated role in the fertilization process. In fish sperm, the calcium channel plays a key role in sperm activation. However, the functionality of the CatSper channels has not been studied in any of the fish species. For the first time, we studied the relationship of the CatSper channel with sperm motility in a fish, using Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) as the model. The results of our study showed that the CatSper channel in Salmo salar has chemical-physical characteristics similar to those reported for mammalian CatSper channels. In this work, it was shown that Salmo salar CatSper 3 protein has a molecular weight of approximately 55-kDa similar to Homo sapiens CatSper 3. In silico analyses suggest that this channel forms a heterotetramer sensitive to the specific inhibitor HC-056456, with a binding site in the center of the pore of the CatSper channel, hindering or preventing the influx of Ca (2+) ions. The in vitro assay of the sperm motility inhibition of Salmo salar with the inhibitor HC-056456 showed that sperm treated with this inhibitor significantly reduced the total and progressive motility (p < .0001), demonstrating the importance of this ionic channel for this cell. The complementation of the in silico and in vitro analyses of the present work demonstrates that the CatSper channel plays a key role in the regulation of sperm motility in Atlantic salmon.