iScience (Jun 2024)

The mouse epididymal amyloid matrix is a mammalian counterpart of a bacterial biofilm

  • Caitlyn Myers,
  • Georgia Rae Atkins,
  • Johanna Villarreal,
  • R. Bryan Sutton,
  • Gail A. Cornwall

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 6
p. 110152

Abstract

Read online

Summary: The mouse epididymis is a long tubule connecting the testis to the vas deferens. Its primary functions are to mature spermatozoa into motile and fertile cells and to protect them from pathogens that ascend the male tract. We previously demonstrated that a functional extracellular amyloid matrix surrounds spermatozoa in the epididymal lumen and has host defense functions, properties not unlike that of an extracellular biofilm that encloses and protects a bacterial community. Here we show the epididymal amyloid matrix also structurally resembles a biofilm by containing eDNA, eRNA, and mucin-like polysaccharides. Further these structural components exhibit comparable behaviors and perform functions such as their counterparts in bacterial biofilms. Our studies suggest that nature has used the ancient building blocks of bacterial biofilms to form an analogous structure that nurtures and protects the mammalian male germline.

Keywords