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The role of centrobin in spermatogenesis
Flintová, Jennifer ; Komrsková, Kateřina (advisor) ; Šebková, Nataša (referee)
Spermatogenesis is a highly orchestrated, strictly regulated cascade of events that could be divided into three major processes: mitotic expansion of diploid germ cells (spermatocytogenesis), meiotic division creating haploid cells, and spermiogenesis. Spermiogenesis, the final stage of spermatogenesis comprises a striking metamorphosis of round haploid spermatids into morphologically and functionally specialized spermatozoa designed for the fertilization. One of the proteins indispensable for proper sperm morphogenesis is centrobin, a structural component of the specialized cytoskeletal structures of the elongating spermatids (acroplaxome and manchette), executing essential role in sperm head shaping and assembly of the head-tail coupling apparatus. Disruption in Cntrob gene (coding for centrobin) in rats homozygous at the hd (hypodactyly) locus results in male infertility, with a striking morphological signature called "decapitated sperm syndrome" with detachment of sperm head from the flagellum due to impaired head-tail coupling. However, molecular function of centrobin in spermiogenesis is still unknown. Sperm decapitation is a distinct phenotype described in several mouse mutants and importantly from infertile human males. Strikingly, in addition to proteins functioning in cytoskeletal...

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