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[Palmitoylation of heat shock protein 90 in mouse sperm].

Protein palmitoylation, one of post-translation modifications, refers to the addition of saturated 16-carbon palmitic acid to cysteine residues via the thioester bond. It plays key roles in various functional activities, such as the interaction, stability and location of proteins. Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90), an important molecular chaperone, has been reported to be involved in sperm capacitation. However, it remains unclear whether protein palmitoylation exists in sperm and whether Hsp90 in sperm is palmitoylated under different physiological conditions. In this study, we examined whether the protein palmitoylation is present in mouse cauda epididymis sperm using acyl-biotin exchange method, predicted the potential palmitoylated sites of Hsp90 by the software CSS-Palm 4.0 and detected the palmitoylated Hsp90 in the mouse sperm from caput epididymis and cauda epididymis by immunoprecipitation. We found that some proteins, approximately 50, 65, 72, 85 and 130 kDa, were palmitoylated in mouse cauda epididymis sperm. Five sites in two Hsp90 isoforms were predicted to be palmitoylated. The results also showed that Hsp90 in mouse sperm was palmitoylated and its palmitoylation level was involved in different physiological conditions: the palmitoylation level of cauda epididymis sperm was higher than that of caput epididymis sperm; and the palmitoylation level after capacitation was much higher than that before capacitation. In conclusion, this study reveals that protein palmitoylation is present in mouse sperm and the palmitoylated Hsp90 is associated with different physiological conditions in sperm.

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