Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brett Nixon is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brett Nixon.


Biology of Reproduction | 2009

DNA Damage in Human Spermatozoa Is Highly Correlated with the Efficiency of Chromatin Remodeling and the Formation of 8-Hydroxy-2′-Deoxyguanosine, a Marker of Oxidative Stress

Geoffry N. De Iuliis; Laura K. Thomson; Lisa A. Mitchell; Jane M. Finnie; Adam J. Koppers; Andrew Hedges; Brett Nixon; R. John Aitken

DNA damage in human spermatozoa has been associated with a range of adverse clinical outcomes, including infertility, abortion, and disease in the offspring. We have advanced a two-step hypothesis to explain this damage involving impaired chromatin remodeling during spermiogenesis followed by a free radical attack to induce DNA strand breakage. The objective of the present study was to test this hypothesis by determining whether impaired chromatin protamination is correlated with oxidative base damage and DNA fragmentation in human spermatozoa. DNA fragmentation, chromatin protamination, mitochondrial membrane potential, and formation of the oxidative base adduct, 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine (8OHdG), were monitored by flow cytometry/fluorescence microscopy. Impairment of DNA protamination during late spermatogenesis was highly correlated (P < 0.001) with DNA damage in human spermatozoa. The disruption of chromatin remodeling also was associated with a significant elevation in the levels of 8OHdG (P < 0.001), and the latter was itself highly correlated with DNA fragmentation (P < 0.001). The significance of oxidative stress in 8OHdG formation was demonstrated experimentally using H2O2/Fe2+ and by the correlation observed between this base adduct and superoxide generation (P < 0.001). That 8OHdG formation was inversely associated with mitochondrial membrane potential (P < 0.001) suggested a possible role for these organelles in the creation of oxidative stress. These results clearly highlight the importance of oxidative stress in the induction of sperm DNA damage and carry significant implications for the clinical management of this condition.


Journal of Cell Science | 2004

Tyrosine phosphorylation activates surface chaperones facilitating sperm-zona recognition

Kelly L. Asquith; Rosa M. Baleato; Eileen A. McLaughlin; Brett Nixon; R. John Aitken

Mammalian spermatozoa undergo a series of molecular and biochemical changes collectively termed capacitation prior to acquiring the ability to fertilise the oocyte. Although phosphorylation of sperm proteins on tyrosine residues has been recognised as an important component of this process, the precise relationship between the phosphorylation status of mammalian spermatozoa and their capacity for fertilisation has remained unclear. In this study we demonstrate a causal relationship between tyrosine phosphorylation in spermatozoa and sperm-zona interaction. The phosphotyrosine expression associated with sperm capacitation localised to internal flagellar structures in permeabilised cells but could also be detected on the exterior surface of the sperm head in live cells. Importantly, almost all spermatozoa bound to the zona pellucida demonstrated this pattern of phosphoprotein localisation, compared to fewer than 15% of the free-swimming population. These data suggest that tyrosine phosphorylation plays a significant role in remodelling the sperm surface, so that these cells are able to recognise the zona pellucida. Phosphoproteome analysis yielded the first evidence of molecular chaperones, endoplasmin (erp99) and heat shock protein 60 (hsp60), as targets for phosphorylation on the surface of mouse spermatozoa, whereas immunofluorescence localised these proteins to the precise region of the sperm head that participates in zona recognition. Based on these results, we propose a novel mechanism for mammalian gamete interaction whereby the activation of sperm-surface chaperones by tyrosine phosphorylation during capacitation may trigger conformational changes facilitating the formation of a functional zona pellucida receptor complex on the surface of mammalian spermatozoa.


Biology of Reproduction | 2006

The Identification of Mouse Sperm-Surface-Associated Proteins and Characterization of Their Ability to Act as Decapacitation Factors

Brett Nixon; David A. MacIntyre; Lisa A. Mitchell; Gerard M. Gibbs; Moira K. O'Bryan; R. John Aitken

Abstract Mammalian spermatozoa must undergo capacitation before acquiring the ability to fertilize the oocyte. This process is believed to be initiated following the release of surface-associated decapacitation factors that are elaborated by both the epididymis and the male accessory organs. Herein, we report the identification of a number of proteins that are actively released from the surface of mouse spermatozoa during capacitation in vitro. As anticipated, the addition of these factors back to suspensions of mouse spermatozoa was shown to suppress several correlates of the capacitation process. Specifically, they induced a significant, dose-dependent inhibition of the ability of spermatozoa to undergo a progesterone-induced acrosome reaction and to bind to the zona pellucida in vitro. Inhibition of these functions was associated with the suppression of tyrosine phosphorylation in the sperm plasma membrane but had no effect on the phosphorylation of internal proteins in either the sperm head or tail. This inhibitory activity was attributed to a subset of the isolated proteins compromising at least four putative decapacitation factors. These proteins were identified via tandem-mass spectrometry amino acid sequence analysis as plasma membrane fatty acid binding protein, cysteine-rich secretory protein 1 (CRISP1), phosphatidylethanolamine binding protein 1 (PBP), and an unnamed protein product that we have termed decapacitation factor 10 (DF10). Of these proteins, PBP was identified as a primary candidate for a decapacitation factor.


Molecular Human Reproduction | 2013

Sperm capacitation: a distant landscape glimpsed but unexplored

R. John Aitken; Brett Nixon

Capacitation is a remarkable process whereby spermatozoa prepare themselves for engagement with the oocyte. Although the existence of this process has been appreciated as a biological phenomenon for more than half a century, its molecular underpinnings still await clarification. We know that some of the major changes involve sterol oxidation and efflux from the plasma membrane, the anterior movement of lipid rafts, changes in the surface expression of a variety of proteins including hyaluronidase and receptors for the zona pellucida, an increase in intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), the induction of tyrosine phosphorylation and the expression of hyperactivated motility. These changes are dependent on the presence of bicarbonate, to facilitate cAMP generation, maintain an alkaline intracellular pH and support an optimal level of reactive oxygen species generation and are enhanced by the presence of albumin to provide antioxidant protection to the plasma membrane and promote cholesterol efflux. In vivo, the rate at which sperm cells capacitate is carefully controlled in order to ensure that the release of capacitated spermatozoa from a post-insemination reservoir in the isthmic region of the oviduct is synchronized with ovulation. The factors that control these critical events are now being resolved, aided by proteomic studies that are providing critical definitive information on the range of receptors that exist in the sperm plasma membrane and define the manner in which these exquisitely complex cells interact with their environment. Progress in this area has been enhanced by IVF technology pioneered by Bob Edwards and will ultimately facilitate the design of safe, effective culture conditions for optimization of this revolutionary therapy.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2009

Composition and significance of detergent resistant membranes in mouse spermatozoa

Brett Nixon; Amanda Bielanowicz; Eileen A. McLaughlin; Nongnuj Tanphaichitr; Michael A. Ensslin; R. John Aitken

Mammalian spermatozoa acquire the ability to fertilize an oocyte as they ascend the female reproductive tract. This process is characterized by a complex cascade of biophysical and biochemical changes collectively know as “capacitation.” The attainment of a capacitated state is accompanied by a dramatic reorganization of the surface architecture to render spermatozoa competent to recognize the oocyte and initiate fertilization. Emerging evidence indicates that this process is facilitated by molecular chaperone‐mediated assembly of a multimeric receptor complex on the sperm surface. However, the mechanisms responsible for gathering key recognition molecules within this putative complex have yet to be defined. In this study, we provide the first evidence that chaperones partition into detergent resistant membrane fractions (DRMs) within capacitated mouse spermatozoa and co‐localize in membrane microdomains enriched with the lipid raft marker, GM1 ganglioside. During capacitation, these microdomains coalesce within the apical region of the sperm head, a location compatible with a role in sperm–zona pellucida interaction. Significantly, DRMs isolated from spermatozoa possessed the ability to selectively bind to the zona pellucida of unfertilized, but not fertilized, mouse oocytes. A comprehensive proteomic analysis of the DRM fractions identified a total of 100 proteins, a number of which have previously been implicated in sperm–oocyte interaction. Collectively, these data provide compelling evidence that mouse spermatozoa possess membrane microdomains that provide a platform for the assembly of key recognition molecules on the sperm surface and thus present an important mechanistic insight into the fundamental cell biological process of sperm–oocyte interaction. J. Cell. Physiol. 218: 122–134, 2009.


Human Reproduction Update | 2012

miRNA and mammalian male germ cells

Skye C McIver; Shaun D. Roman; Brett Nixon; Eileen A. McLaughlin

BACKGROUND Achieving the correct spatial and temporal expression of germ-cell-specific genes is fundamental to the production of viable healthy spermatozoa. Notably, post-transcriptional gene regulation resulting in the repression of protein translation is central to many embryonic processes, and is particularly active during spermatogenesis. In this review, we discuss microRNA (miRNA) regulation of target gene expression in relation to mammalian spermatogenesis, the establishment of testicular germ cell tumours (TGCT) and the potential use of miRNA manipulation for cancer therapy and fertility regulation. METHODS Journal databases such as PubMed were searched using key words, including miRNA, testis, spermatogenesis, germ cell, testicular cancer and cancer. RESULTS In the past decade, the deployment of small non-coding RNA molecules, including miRNA, by the cell, has been recognized as among the most important mechanisms of fine-tuning translational regulation in differentiating cell types. For key regulators of male gametogenesis, high levels of gene expression do not always correspond to elevated levels of protein expression. Cumulatively this indicates that enhancement and repression of post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms are essential to the success of spermatogenesis. There is also growing evidence that this form of regulation contributes to the aetiology of both TGCT and spermatocytic tumours. CONCLUSIONS miRNA plays an essential role in regulation of genes during the process of spermatogenesis. Disruption of this regulation has the ability to contribute to the neoplastic development of germ cell tumours. However, targeted knockdown of specific miRNA molecules has the potential to form both anti-oncogenic reagents and underpin the basis for novel contraceptive technologies.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2007

New insights into the molecular mechanisms of sperm-egg interaction

Brett Nixon; Robert John Aitken; Eileen A. McLaughlin

Abstract.At the moment of insemination millions of mammalian sperm cells are released into the female reproductive tract in order to find a single cell – the oocyte. The spermatozoa subsequently ignore the thousands of cells they make contact with during their journey to the site of fertilisation, until they reach the surface of the oocyte. At this point, they bind tenaciously to the acellular coat, known as the zona pellucida, that surrounds the oocyte and initiate the chain of cellular interactions that will culminate in fertilization. These exquisitely cell- and species-specific recognition events are among the most strategically important cellular interactions in biology. Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underpin them has implications for diagnosis of the aetiology of human infertility and the development of novel targets for fertility regulation. Herein, we describe two models indicating the plethora of highly orchestrated molecular interactions underlying successful sperm zona binding and sperm oocyte fusion.


Biology of Reproduction | 2005

Localization and Significance of Molecular Chaperones, Heat Shock Protein 1, and Tumor Rejection Antigen gp96 in the Male Reproductive Tract and During Capacitation and Acrosome Reaction

Kelly L. Asquith; Amanda J. Harman; Eileen A. McLaughlin; Brett Nixon; R. John Aitken

Abstract Although the molecular basis of sperm-oocyte interaction is unclear, recent studies have implicated two chaperone proteins, heat shock protein 1 (HSPD1; previously known as heat shock protein 60) and tumor rejection antigen gp96 (TRA1; previously known as endoplasmin), in the formation of a functional zona-receptor complex on the surface of mammalian spermatozoa. The current study was undertaken to investigate the expression of these chaperones during the ontogeny of male germ cells through spermatogenesis, epididymal sperm maturation, capacitation, and acrosomal exocytosis. In testicular sections, both HSPD1 and TRA1 were closely associated with the mitochondria of spermatogonia and primary spermatocytes. However, this labeling pattern disappeared from the male germ line during spermiogenesis to become undetectable in testicular spermatozoa. Subsequently, these chaperones could be detected in epididymal spermatozoa and in previously unreported “dense bodies” in the epididymal lumen. The latter appeared in the precise region of the epididymis (proximal corpus), where spermatozoa acquire the capacity to recognize and bind to the zona pellucida, implicating these structures in the functional remodeling of the sperm surface during epididymal maturation. Both HSPD1 and TRA1 were subsequently found to become coexpressed on the surface of live mouse spermatozoa following capacitation in vitro and were lost once these cells had undergone the acrosome reaction, as would be expected of cell surface molecules involved in sperm-egg interaction. These data reinforce the notion that these chaperones are intimately involved in the mechanisms by which mammalian spermatozoa both acquire and express their ability to recognize the zona pellucida.


Cells Tissues Organs | 2001

Galactosyltransferase Function during Mammalian Fertilization

Brett Nixon; Qingxian Lu; Michael J. Wassler; Cynthia I. Foote; Michael A. Ensslin; Barry D. Shur

Gamete recognition has been studied extensively in the mouse. In this system, it is generally believed that sperm bind to a class of O-linked oligosaccharides on the zona pellucida glycoprotein, ZP3. The best characterized sperm receptor for ZP3 is β1,4-galactosyltransferase (GalT), which functions in a lectin-like capacity by binding to N-terminal N-acetylglucosamine residues on ZP3 oligosaccharides. Multivalent oligosaccharides on ZP3, as well as synthetic polymers terminating in N-acetylglucosamine aggregate GalT, leading to activation of a heterotrimeric G protein cascade and culminating in the acrosome reaction. Following fertilization, cortical granules release N-acetylglucosaminidase, which removes the binding site for sperm GalT and facilitates the zona block to polyspermic binding. Genetic manipulation of GalT expression has confirmed its function as a ZP3 receptor. Overexpressing GalT on sperm leads to increased binding of ZP3, increased G protein activation, and precocious acrosome reactions. In contrast, sperm from mice made null for GalT by homologous recombination are refractory to ZP3, in that they are unable to bind soluble ZP3 and fail to undergo the acrosome reaction in response to zona glycoproteins. Surprisingly, GalT null sperm still bind to the zona and achieve low rates of fertilization in vitro. This then suggests that sperm-egg binding involves receptor-ligand interactions independent of GalT and ZP3. The current model suggests that GalT functions as the ZP3 receptor that is responsible for inducing the acrosome reaction, whereas initial sperm-zona binding is dictated by other sperm surface receptors. Consistent with this, at least three other zona pellucida monosaccharides have been implicated in sperm binding, and novel sperm surface glycoproteins have been suggested to function in gamete binding. A large scaffolding protein has been identified that associates with the GalT cytoplasmic domain and may be responsible for orchestrating its signal transduction capacities that lead to the acrosome reaction.


Mutation Research | 2008

Impact of estrogenic compounds on DNA integrity in human spermatozoa: Evidence for cross-linking and redox cycling activities

L.E. Bennetts; G.N. De Iuliis; Brett Nixon; M. Kime; K. Zelski; Carmel McVicar; Sheena E.M. Lewis; Robert John Aitken

A great deal of circumstantial evidence has linked DNA damage in human spermatozoa with adverse reproductive outcomes including reduced fertility and high rates of miscarriage. Although oxidative stress is thought to make a significant contribution to DNA damage in the male germ line, the factors responsible for creating this stress have not been elucidated. One group of compounds that are thought to be active in this context are the estrogens, either generated as a result of the endogenous metabolism of androgens within the male reproductive tract or gaining access to the latter as a consequence of environmental exposure. In this study, a wide variety of estrogenic compounds were assessed for their direct effects on human spermatozoa in vitro. DNA integrity was assessed using the Comet and TUNEL assays, lesion frequencies were quantified by QPCR using targets within the mitochondrial and nuclear (beta-globin) genomes, DNA adducts were characterized by mass spectrometry and redox activity was monitored using dihydroethidium (DHE) as the probe. Of the estrogenic and estrogen analogue compounds evaluated, catechol estrogens, quercetin, diethylstilbestrol and pyrocatechol stimulated intense redox activity while genistein was only active at the highest doses tested. Other estrogens and estrogen analogues, such as 17beta-estradiol, nonylphenol, bisphenol A and 2,3-dihydroxynaphthalene were inactive. Estrogen-induced redox activity was associated with a dramatic loss of motility and, in the case of 2-hydroxyestradiol, the induction of significant DNA fragmentation. Mass spectrometry also indicated that catechol estrogens were capable of forming dimers that can cross-link the densely packed DNA strands in sperm chromatin, impairing nuclear decondensation. These results highlight the potential importance of estrogenic compounds in creating oxidative stress and DNA damage in the male germ line and suggest that further exploration of these compounds in the aetiology of male infertility is warranted.

Collaboration


Dive into the Brett Nixon's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. J. Aitken

University of Newcastle

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge