The gene for the Alzheimer‐associated β‐amyloid‐binding protein (ERAB) is differentially expressed in the testicular Leydig cells of the azoospermic by w/wv mouse

1998 
In order to discover possible new testicular paracrine factors involved in the establishment of spermatogenesis, a modified differential display reverse transcription, polymerase chain reaction (DDRT-PCR) procedure was used to detect gene transcripts preferentially expressed in the testes of the azoospermic w/wv mutant mouse. One of the differentially expressed gene products showed partial similarity to members of the short-chain alcohol dehydrogenase family of enzymes. This cDNA fragment was used to obtain the full-length mouse cDNA sequence, which initially showed moderate similarity to a 20β-steroid dehydrogenase from lower organisms, and later shown to have > 85 % similarity to a novel endoplasmic-reticulum-associated-binding protein (ERAB) from the human brain, implicated in Alzheimer's disease. A recently cloned bovine sequence also of high similarity suggests that this molecule might also represent an isozyme of 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase. Using the mouse cDNA as probe, northern hybridization showed enrichment of the transcript to the testicular Leydig cells, and showed a specific approximately 20-fold enrichment in the azoospermic mouse testis. The level of the testicular ERAB transcript does not seem to change through puberty, suggesting that a lack of germ cells alone is not responsible for the up-regulation in the w/wv testis. Using the three-dimensional coordinates of the published 20β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase structure as template, it was additionally possible to construct a molecular model of the novel protein which showed it to have a very similar structure to this enzyme, including the substrate-binding domain.
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