Brian H. Jones
University of Pennsylvania
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Featured researches published by Brian H. Jones.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Alexander J. Travis; Carolina J. Jorgez; Tanya Merdiushev; Brian H. Jones; Danalyn M. Dess; Laura Diaz-Cueto; Bayard T. Storey; Gregory S. Kopf; Stuart B. Moss
Spermatozoa are highly polarized cells with specific metabolic pathways compartmentalized in different regions. Previously, we hypothesized that glycolysis is organized in the fibrous sheath of the flagellum to provide ATP to dynein ATPases that generate motility and to protein kinases that regulate motility. Although a recent report suggested that glucose is not essential for murine sperm capacitation, we demonstrated that glucose (but not lactate or pyruvate) was necessary and sufficient to support the protein tyrosine phosphorylation events associated with capacitation. The effect of glucose on this signaling pathway was downstream of cAMP, and appeared to arise indirectly as a consequence of metabolism as opposed to a direct signaling effect. Moreover, the phosphorylation events were not affected by uncouplers of oxidative respiration, inhibitors of electron transfer, or by a lack of substrates for oxidative respiration in the medium. Further experiments aimed at identifying potential regulators of sperm glycolysis focused on a germ cell-specific isoform of hexokinase, HK1-SC, which localizes to the fibrous sheath. HK1-SC activity and biochemical localization did not change during sperm capacitation, suggesting that glycolysis in sperm is regulated either at the level of substrate availability or by downstream enzymes. These data support the hypothesis that ATP specifically produced by a compartmentalized glycolytic pathway in the principal piece of the flagellum, as opposed to ATP generated by mitochondria in the mid-piece, is strictly required for protein tyrosine phosphorylation events that take place during sperm capacitation. The relationship between these pathways suggests that spermatozoa offer a model system for the study of integration of compartmentalized metabolic and signaling pathways.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2005
Zhibing Zhang; Brian H. Jones; Waixing Tang; Stuart B. Moss; Zhangyong Wei; Clement Ho; Michael Pollack; Eran Horowitz; Jean Bennett; Michael E. Baker; Jerome F. Strauss
The axoneme central apparatus is thought to control flagellar/ciliary waveform and maintain the structural integrity of the axoneme, but proteins involved in these processes have not been fully elucidated. Moreover the network of interactions among them that allows these events to take place in a compact space has not been defined. PF6, a component of the Chlamydomonas central apparatus, is localized to the 1a projection of the C1 microtubule. Mutations in the Chlamydomonas PF6 gene result in flagellar paralysis. We characterized human and murine orthologues of PF6. The murine Pf6 gene is expressed in a pattern consistent with a role in flagella and cilia, and the PF6 protein is indeed localized to the central apparatus of the sperm flagellar axoneme. We discovered that a portion of PF6 associates with the mammalian orthologue of Chlamydomonas PF16 (sperm-associated antigen 6 (SPAG6)), another central apparatus protein that is localized to the C1 microtubule in algae. A fragment of PF6 corresponding to the PF6 domain that interacts with SPAG6 in yeast two-hybrid assays and colocalizes with SPAG6 in transfected cells was missing from epididymal sperm of SPAG6-deficient mice. SPAG6 binds to the mammalian orthologue of PF20, which in Chlamydomonas is located in bridges connecting the C2 and C1 microtubules. Thus, PF6, SPAG6, and PF20 form a newly identified network that links together components of the axoneme central apparatus and presumably participates in its dynamic regulation of ciliary and flagellar beat.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2005
Zhibing Zhang; Brian H. Jones; Waixing Tang; Stuart B. Moss; Zhangyong Wei; Clement Ho; Michael Pollack; Eran Horowitz; Jean Bennett; Michael E. Baker; Jerome F. Strauss
The axoneme central apparatus is thought to control flagellar/ciliary waveform and maintain the structural integrity of the axoneme, but proteins involved in these processes have not been fully elucidated. Moreover the network of interactions among them that allows these events to take place in a compact space has not been defined. PF6, a component of the Chlamydomonas central apparatus, is localized to the 1a projection of the C1 microtubule. Mutations in the Chlamydomonas PF6 gene result in flagellar paralysis. We characterized human and murine orthologues of PF6. The murine Pf6 gene is expressed in a pattern consistent with a role in flagella and cilia, and the PF6 protein is indeed localized to the central apparatus of the sperm flagellar axoneme. We discovered that a portion of PF6 associates with the mammalian orthologue of Chlamydomonas PF16 (sperm-associated antigen 6 (SPAG6)), another central apparatus protein that is localized to the C1 microtubule in algae. A fragment of PF6 corresponding to the PF6 domain that interacts with SPAG6 in yeast two-hybrid assays and colocalizes with SPAG6 in transfected cells was missing from epididymal sperm of SPAG6-deficient mice. SPAG6 binds to the mammalian orthologue of PF20, which in Chlamydomonas is located in bridges connecting the C2 and C1 microtubules. Thus, PF6, SPAG6, and PF20 form a newly identified network that links together components of the axoneme central apparatus and presumably participates in its dynamic regulation of ciliary and flagellar beat.
Biology of Reproduction | 2004
Alexander J. Travis; Levent Tutuncu; Carolina J. Jorgez; Teri Ord; Brian H. Jones; Gregory S. Kopf; Carmen J. Williams
Abstract In both the mouse and the human, it is a point of controversy whether glucose is necessary for in vitro fertilization. Some of this controversy has resulted from a failure to distinguish between requirements for glucose during sperm capacitation versus requirements during the multistage process of fertilization. Using the mouse as a model, we performed a series of experiments designed to identify specific processes that might require glucose. We observed a positive correlation between increasing glucose concentrations during capacitation and fertilization, and increasing fertilization of zona pellucida (ZP)-intact eggs. These data supported a requirement for glucose in the fertilization medium even when sperm were first capacitated in the presence of 5.5 mM glucose. This glucose requirement was observed for both ZP-intact and ZP-free eggs. During ZP-free in vitro fertilization, some binding and fusion between the plasma membrane of the sperm and egg occurred in the absence of glucose and at concentrations less than 1 mM, suggesting that this substrate is not absolutely required. However, glucose concentrations of 1 mM or higher greatly facilitated both binding and fusion under these conditions. These subtle distinctions suggest that during ZP-free in vitro fertilization, 1 mM glucose represents a threshold level that facilitates binding and fusion. Taken as a whole, the data suggest requirements for glucose during both capacitation and fertilization under normal physiologic conditions.
Biology of Reproduction | 2006
Rick W. Nipper; Brian H. Jones; George L. Gerton; Stuart B. Moss
Abstract A-kinase anchor proteins (AKAPs) spatially restrict cAMP-dependent protein kinase by tethering it to various cellular structures. In the polarized sperm cell, various compartmentalized functions, such as motility generated by the flagellum, are modulated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. This important regulatory enzyme is associated with AKAP4, the principal component of the fibrous sheath; AKAP4 is synthesized as a precursor, pro-AKAP4, which is cleaved into mature AKAP4 during fibrous sheath assembly. To define the domains responsible for the intracellular distribution and assembly of AKAP4 into a macromolecular complex, various AKAP4-green fluorescent protein (GFP) constructs were introduced into somatic cell lines. The presence of the pro domain, either alone or as part of pro-AKAP4, resulted in a diffuse cytoplasmic localization of the GFP fusion protein, suggesting that, the pro domain keeps the AKAP4 precursor unassembled in vivo until it is transported to the developing tail structure and incorporated into the fibrous sheath. When the mature AKAP4-GFP fusion protein was expressed, it localized in a punctate cytoplasmic pattern. Two domains critical for this punctate localization, T2a and T2b, are homologous to the T2-tethering domain of rat AKAP5 that is important for binding to the actin cytoskeleton in transfected HEK293 cells. In contrast to AKAP5, the distribution of AKAP4 was dependent on the microtubular cytoskeleton. The interaction of AKAP4 with the microtubular network provides evidence that the longitudinal columns of the fibrous sheath, which contain AKAP4, may interact directly with the outer microtubular doublets of the sperm axoneme.
Developmental Cell | 2005
Kenneth C. Hess; Brian H. Jones; Becky Marquez; Yanqiu Chen; Teri Ord; Margarita Kamenetsky; Catarina Miyamoto; Jonathan H. Zippin; Gregory S. Kopf; Susan S. Suarez; Lonny R. Levin; Carmen J. Williams; Jochen Buck; Stuart B. Moss
Developmental Biology | 2001
Alexander J. Travis; Tanya Merdiushev; Louis Vargas; Brian H. Jones; Marie A. Purdon; Rick W. Nipper; Josephine Galatioto; Stuart B. Moss; Gary R. Hunnicutt; Gregory S. Kopf
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Zhibing Zhang; Igor Kostetskii; Stuart B. Moss; Brian H. Jones; Clement Ho; Hongbin Wang; Tatsuro Kishida; George L. Gerton; Glenn L. Radice; Jerome F. Strauss
Molecular Human Reproduction | 2005
Eran Horowitz; Zhibing Zhang; Brian H. Jones; Stuart B. Moss; Clement Ho; Jennifer R. Wood; Xingmei Wang; Mary D. Sammel; Jerome F. Strauss
Molecular Human Reproduction | 2005
Eran Horowitz; Zhibing Zhang; Brian H. Jones; Stuart B. Moss; Clement Ho; Jennifer R. Wood; Xingmei Wang; Mary D. Sammel; Jerome F. Strauss