Genetics, Vol. 152, 209-220, May 1999, Copyright © 1999

spe-12 Encodes a Sperm Cell Surface Protein That Promotes Spermiogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans

Jeremy Nancea, Alicia N. Minnitia, Cathryn Sadlera, and Samuel Warda
a Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721

Corresponding author: Samuel Ward, MCB Department, The University of Arizona, Life Sciences South, Rm. 452, Tucson, AZ 85721., samward{at}u.arizona.edu (E-mail)

Communicating editor: R. K. HERMAN

During spermiogenesis, Caenorhabditis elegans spermatids activate and mature into crawling spermatozoa without synthesizing new proteins. Mutations in the spe-12 gene block spermatid activation, rendering normally self-fertile hermaphrodites sterile. Mutant males, however, are fertile. Surprisingly, when mutant hermaphrodites mate with a male, their self-spermatids activate and form functional spermatozoa, presumably due to contact with male seminal fluid. Here we show that, in addition to its essential role in normal activation of hermaphrodite-derived spermatids, SPE-12 also plays a supplementary but nonessential role in mating-induced activation. We have identified the spe-12 gene, which encodes a novel protein containing a single transmembrane domain. spe-12 mRNA is expressed in the sperm-producing germ line and the protein localizes to the spermatid cell surface. We propose that SPE-12 functions downstream of both hermaphrodite- and male-derived activation signals in a spermatid signaling pathway that initiates spermiogenesis.





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