Two distinct forms of the 64,000 Mr protein of the cleavage stimulation factor are expressed in mouse male germ cells
- A. Michelle Wallace*,
- Brinda Dass*,
- Stuart E. Ravnik*,
- Vijay Tonk†,
- Nancy A. Jenkins‡,
- Debra J. Gilbert‡,
- Neal G. Copeland‡, and
- Clinton C. MacDonald*,§,¶
- Departments of *Cell Biology and Biochemistry and †Pediatrics and Pathology and §Southwest Cancer Center at University Medical Center, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Lubbock, TX 79430; and ‡Mammalian Genetics Laboratory, Advanced BioScience Laboratories/Basic Research Program, National Cancer Institute/Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center, Frederick, MD 21702
-
Communicated by Thomas E. Shenk, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ (received for review February 3, 1999)
Abstract
Polyadenylation in male germ cells differs from that in somatic cells. Many germ cell mRNAs do not contain the canonical AAUAAA in their 3′ ends but are efficiently polyadenylated. To determine whether the 64,000 M r protein of the cleavage stimulation factor (CstF-64) is altered in male germ cells, we examined its expression in mouse testis. In addition to the 64,000 M r form, we found a related ≈70,000 M r protein that is abundant in testis, at low levels in brain, and undetectable in all other tissues examined. Expression of the ≈70,000 M r CstF-64 was limited to meiotic spermatocytes and postmeiotic spermatids in testis. In contrast, the 64,000 M r form was absent from spermatocytes, suggesting that the testis-specific CstF-64 might control expression of meiosis-specific genes. To determine why the 64,000 M r CstF-64 is not expressed in spermatocytes, we mapped its chromosomal location to the X chromosome in both mouse and human. CstF-64 may, therefore, be absent in spermatocytes because the X chromosome is inactivated during male meiosis. By extension, the testis-specific CstF-64 may be expressed from an autosomal homolog of the X chromosomal gene.
Footnotes
-
↵ ¶ To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Department of Cell Biology and Biochemistry, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, 3601 Fourth Street, Lubbock, TX 79430. e-mail: cbbccm2{at}ttuhsc.edu.
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- CstF,
- cleavage stimulation factor;
- FISH,
- fluorescence in situ hybridization
- Copyright © 1999, The National Academy of Sciences





