Cell Reports (Jun 2018)

An RNA-Binding Multimer Specifies Nematode Sperm Fate

  • Scott T. Aoki,
  • Douglas F. Porter,
  • Aman Prasad,
  • Marvin Wickens,
  • Craig A. Bingman,
  • Judith Kimble

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 13
pp. 3769 – 3775

Abstract

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Summary: FOG-3 is a master regulator of sperm fate in Caenorhabditis elegans and homologous to Tob/BTG proteins, which in mammals are monomeric adaptors that recruit enzymes to RNA binding proteins. Here, we determine the FOG-3 crystal structure and in vitro demonstrate that FOG-3 forms dimers that can multimerize. The FOG-3 multimeric structure has a basic surface potential, suggestive of binding nucleic acid. Consistent with that prediction, FOG-3 binds directly to nearly 1,000 RNAs in nematode spermatogenic germ cells. Most binding is to the 3′ UTR, and most targets (94%) are oogenic mRNAs, even though assayed in spermatogenic cells. When tethered to a reporter mRNA, FOG-3 represses its expression. Together these findings elucidate the molecular mechanism of sperm fate specification and reveal the evolution of a protein from monomeric to multimeric form with acquisition of a distinct mode of mRNA repression. : The mechanism of the sperm or oocyte fate decision has been elusive. Aoki et al. report that nematode FOG-3, a Tob/BTG protein driving sperm fate, has evolved from monomeric to multimeric form with acquisition of a divergent Tob/BTG mechanism for mRNA repression. Keywords: FOG-3, Tob/BTG, RNA binding protein, multimerization, protein evolution, sperm fate