major sperm proteins
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia K. Zograf ◽  
Yulia A. Trebukhova ◽  
Vladimir V. Yushin ◽  
Konstantin V. Yakovlev

Abstract Major sperm proteins (MSP) are a nematode-specific system of motor proteins required for amoeboid sperm movement. A number of MSP genes vary in different nematode species, but encoded protein sequences reveal high homology between these proteins. In fact, all studies of MSPs localization and functions are based exclusively on the representatives of the order Rhabditida belonging to the nematode class Chromadorea, while MSP-driven sperm movement in Enoplea, another major clade of the phylum Nematoda is still unconfirmed. In this study, we found out the presence of MSPs in the enoplean nematode Enoplus brevis (Enoplida) and compared MSP localization in sperm of this species with the chromadorean nematode Panagrellus redivivus (Rhabditida). Then, we analyzed the putative MSP sequences of both species. Our results indicate that MSPs are presented in E. brevis spermatozoa and form filamentous structures after sperm activation, which may be considered as the evidence of their motor functions similar to those in the spermatozoa of chromadorean nematodes. We found that E. brevis MSPs show lower homology to known proteins of rhabditids which species reveal hyper-conservatism in MSP protein sequences. It reflects evidently more distant evolutionary relationships of Enoplea and Chromadorea than exist within Rhabditida order. Our data denote necessity of reconsideration of view on MSP evolution within Nematoda.


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