Margarita Vigodner
Yeshiva University
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Featured researches published by Margarita Vigodner.
Human Reproduction | 2013
Margarita Vigodner; Vibha Shrivastava; Leah Elisheva Gutstein; Jordana Schneider; Edward Nieves; Marc Goldstein; M. Feliciano; Myrasol Callaway
BACKGROUND Sumoylation is a type of post-translational modification that is implicated in the regulation of numerous cellular events. However, its role in the function of human sperm has not yet been characterized. METHODS AND RESULTS In this study, both immunofluorescence and electron microscopy revealed that small ubiquitin-like modifiers (SUMO) SUMO1 and SUMO2/3 were highly enriched in the neck area of human sperm that is associated with the redundant nuclear envelope and were also detectable in the flagella and some head regions. Similar localization patterns of SUMO were also observed in mouse and fly sperm. Nonmotile, two-tailed, curled tailed, misshapen, microcephalic (small head) and aciphalic (no head) sperm exhibited abnormally high levels of sumoylation in their neck and tail regions relative to normal sperm. Numerous sumoylated proteins, ranging from 20 to 260 kDa, were detected via western blotting and identified by mass spectrometry, and 55 SUMO targets that were present specifically in human sperm, and not in the control fraction, corresponded to flagella proteins, proteins involved in the maturation and differentiation of sperm, heat shock proteins and important glycolytic and mitochondrial enzymes. The targets that were identified included proteins with specific functions in germ cells and sperm, such as heat shock-related 70-kDa protein 2, outer dense fiber protein 3, A-kinase anchor proteins 3 and 4, L-lactate dehydrogenase C, sperm protein associated with the nucleus on the X chromosome B/F, valosin-containing protein, seminogelins, histone H4 and ubiquitin. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments confirmed the sumoylation of semenogelin and indicated that some sperm proteins are modified by sumoylation and ubiquitination simultaneously. CONCLUSIONS Numerous proteins are modified by sumoylation in human sperm; excessive sumoylation is a marker of defective spermatozoa.
Reproduction | 2010
Vibha Shrivastava; Marina Pekar; Eliana Grosser; Jay Im; Margarita Vigodner
Small ubiquitin-like modifiers (SUMO) proteins have been implicated in cellular stress response in different tissues, but whether sumoylation has a similar role during spermatogenesis is currently unknown. In this study, changes in the levels of both free SUMO isoforms and high-molecular weight (HMW) SUMO conjugates were monitored before and after the induction of different types of cellular stresses. Using cell lines and primary cells freshly isolated from mouse testes, significant changes were detected in the levels of SUMO1 and SUMO2/3 conjugates following short exposure of the cells to heat stress and oxidative stress. While high concentrations of H(2)O(2) caused an increase in protein sumoylation, low concentrations of H(2)O(2) mostly caused protein desumoylation. Immunofluorescence studies localized SUMO to the sites of DNA double-strand breaks in stressed germ cells and during meiotic recombination. To study the effect of oxidative stress in vivo, animals exposed to tobacco smoke for 12 weeks were used. Changes in sumoylation of HMW proteins were consistent with their oxidative damage in the tobacco-exposed mice. Our results are consistent with the important roles of different SUMO isoforms in stress responses in germ cells. Furthermore, this study identified topoisomerase 2 alpha as one of the targets of sumoylation during normal spermatogenesis and under stress.
Chromosome Research | 2009
Margarita Vigodner
During meiosis in male mammals, X and Y chromosomes undergo the process of meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). A crucial role in MSCI has recently been reported for BRCA1, ATR kinase, and phosphorylated histone H2AX, but the exact mechanism remains to be determined. Small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) proteins have recently been shown to localize to the sex body in mouse meiotic spermatocytes, but the role they play during MSCI is unknown. In this study, in order to better understand the molecular events of MSCI, we followed dynamic changes in γH2AX and SUMO localization patterns during MSCI. Using confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) as an analytical tool for visualizing numerous spermatocytes from the same development stage and for consecutively following the meiotic progression, we were able to demonstrate a very early appearance of SUMO-1, which preceded γH2AX accumulation on the sex chromosomes during their meiotic inactivation. In contrast to SUMO-1, SUMO-2/3 was undetectable in zygotene spermatocytes, suggesting a possible specific role for SUMO-1 in the initiation of MSCI.
International Review of Cell and Molecular Biology | 2011
Margarita Vigodner
Spermatogenesis consists of the mitotic division of spermatogonia, meiosis of spermatocytes, and postmeiotic differentiation of spermatids, processes tightly controlled by hormones and growth factors secreted by testicular somatic cells. The events during spermatogenesis are precisely regulated by the sequential appearance of different proteins and their posttranslational modifications. Sumoylation (covalent modification by small ubiquitin-like modifiers; SUMO proteins) has emerged as an important regulatory mechanism in different cell types, and data obtained from studies on germ cells imply that SUMO proteins are involved in multiple aspects of spermatogenesis. Although progress has been made in the initial characterization of sumoylated proteins during spermatogenesis, the targets of sumoylation, their corresponding pathways in the testis, are mostly unknown. In this chapter, I review what we know about sumoylation in somatic cells, summarize the expression patterns, suggest possible functions of SUMO proteins in testicular cells, and discuss some difficulties and perspectives on the studies of sumoylation during spermatogenesis.
Molecular Reproduction and Development | 2000
R. Golan; Margarita Vigodner; Y. Oschry; L. Shochat; L. M. Lewin
DNA‐staining of hamster testis cell suspensions followed by flow cytometry demonstrated appearance of the first haploid cells at 23 days post partum (dpp) and of condensed chromatin (in elongated spermatids and spermatozoa) at 33–34 dpp. Mature spermatozoa were first observed in the caput epididymis at 36–37 dpp, thus completing the first spermatogenic wave. Testicular cell suspensions from animals from 23 to 38 dpp were stained with acridine orange, and flow cytometer gating was adjusted to include only the haploid cells. Acridine orange intercalated into double‐stranded DNA to produce green fluorescence. The decrease in green fluorescence intensity from 23 until 37 dpp was caused by changes in the binding of DNA to basic proteins in such a fashion as to impede the access of the dye to the DNA double helix. When the green fluorescence values (of the most advanced spermatids) were plotted against the age of the hamsters (in dpp) or the corresponding steps of spermiogenesis, the decrease in fluorescence could be seen to occur in three phases. The inflection point between the first and second phases was observed at about spermiogenesis step 7, consistent with the hypothesis that this represents removal of histone from the chromatin. The second phase presumably represents the period in which transition proteins are bound to the DNA. At approximately steps 15 or 16 a further inflection point was seen where protamines replaced the transition proteins. The red fluorescence produced when acridine orange bound to RNA in spermatids, increased early in spermiogenesis and decreased dramatically at 34 dpp, consistent with the fact that elongating spermatids discard the bulk of their cytoplasm during the maturation process. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 56:105–112, 2000.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2015
Yuxuan Xiao; Daniel Pollack; Edward Nieves; Aby Winchell; Myrasol Callaway; Margarita Vigodner
A diverse set of SUMO target proteins has been identified. Therefore, there is a growing interest in studying sumoylation and SUMO interactions in cells. When the sumoylation of a protein or a SUMO interaction is suspected, a standard co-immunoprecipitation analysis using anti-SUMO and anti-target protein antibody is usually performed as a first step. However, the identification of endogenous sumoylated proteins is challenging because of the activity of isopeptidases, and often only a small fraction of a target protein is sumoylated at a given time. Here, we briefly summarize several important steps to ensure a successful co-immunoprecipitation analysis to detect possible sumoylation.
Reproductive Toxicology | 2014
Vibha Shrivastava; Hannah Marmor; Sholom Chernyak; Marc Goldstein; M. Feliciano; Margarita Vigodner
Sperm are highly dependent on posttranslational modifications of proteins. Massive phosphorylation on tyrosine residue is required for sperm capacitation. Sumoylation has also been recently implicated in spermatogenesis and sperm functions. Cigarette smoke is known to cause oxidative stress in different tissues, and several studies suggest that it causes oxidative stress in sperm. Whether tobacco affects posttranslational modifications in human sperm is currently unknown. In this study, we show that a short exposure of human sperm to physiological concentrations of cigarette smoke extract (CSE) causes the partial de-sumoylation of many sperm proteins. Furthermore, the presence of a low concentration of CSE in the human tubal fluid during an induction of in vitro capacitation inhibits the capacitation-associated increase in protein phosphorylation. Collectively, changes in posttranslational modifications may be one of the mechanisms through which exposure to tobacco can negatively affect sperm functions and cause fertility problems.
Toxicology Letters | 2015
Daniel Pollack; Yuxuan Xiao; Vibha Shrivasatava; Avi Levy; Miriam Andrusier; Jeanine M. D’Armiento; Marina K. Holz; Margarita Vigodner
In this study, DNA arrays have been employed to monitor gene expression patterns in testis of mice exposed to tobacco smoke for 24 weeks and compared to control animals. The results of the analysis revealed significant changes in expression of several genes that may have a role in spermatogenesis. Cdk14 was chosen for further characterization because of a suggested role in the testis and in regulation of Wnt signaling. RT-PCR analysis confirmed down regulation of Cdk14 in mice exposed to cigarette smoke (CS). Cdk14 is expressed in all testicular cells; spermatogonia- and Sertoli-derived cell lines treated with cigarette smoke extract (CSE) in vitro showed down-regulation of CDK14 mRNA and protein levels as well as down-regulation of β-catenin levels. CS-induced down-regulation of CDK14 mRNA and protein levels was also observed in several lung epithelium-derived cell lines including primary normal human bronchial epithelial cells (NHBE), suggesting that the effect is not restricted to the testis. Similar to testicular cells, CS-induced down-regulation of CDK14 in lung cells correlated with decreased levels of β-catenin, a finding suggesting impaired Wnt signaling. In the lungs, CDK14 was localized to the alveolar and bronchial epithelium.
Cell and Tissue Research | 2009
Margarita Vigodner; Jeffrey H. Weisburg; Vibha Shrivastava; Rebecca A. Marmor; Jennifer Fathy; Nolan Skop
Small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) proteins are involved in a variety of cellular processes. Alterations in SUMO conjugation have been implicated in several human diseases, including cancer. Although the main cause of failure in cancer treatment is the development of drug resistance by cancer cells, the mechanisms of drug resistance are not fully understood. SUMO proteins are thought to play roles in various cellular pathways, but no studies have as yet compared the expression of the different SUMO proteins in chemosensitive and drug-resistant cancer cells. To determine the relationship between protein sumoylation and drug resistance, the expression of various SUMO isoforms has been studied and compared in the HL-60 cell line (a model for leukemic cells) and in HL-60RV cells (resistant to vincristine). Co-immunostaining of cells by anti-SUMO antibodies and antibodies against various nuclear subdomains has been examined by an advanced type of bioimaging analysis. Whereas SUMO-2/3 co-localizes exclusively with nuclear bodies containing promyelocytic leukemia protein in both cell types, SUMO-1 has also been seen in nucleolar regions of HL-60, but not in HL-60RV, cells. In HL-60 cells, SUMO-1 occurs adjacent to, but not co-localized with, the nucleolar marker fibrillarin. Western blot analysis has revealed higher levels of free SUMO and sumoylated products in drug-resistant cells and the presence of specific SUMO-1 conjugates in drug-sensitive HL-60 cells, possibly consistent with a specific nucleolar signal. Shortly after the induction of ethanol and oxidative stress, HL-60RV, but not HL-60, cells show increased accumulation of high-molecular-weight SUMO-2/3 conjugates. Thus, SUMO-1 probably has a specific role in the nucleoli of HL-60 cells, and the alteration of sumoylation might be a contributing factor in the development of drug resistance in leukemia cells.
Journal of Tissue Culture Methods | 2002
Margarita Vigodner; L. M. Lewin; Tova Glaser; L. Shochat; Leonid Mittelman; R. Golan
Spermatogenesis consists of spermatogonial proliferation, meiosis and spermatid differentiation. Laser scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM) may be used as an advanced analytical tool to follow spermatogenesis inside the seminiferous tubules without performing histological sections. For this purpose, separated seminiferous tubules are fixed in 0.5% paraformaldehyde, stained for DNA with propidium iodide and analyzed by LSCM. By producing longitudinal optical sections in the layer of spermatogonia, spermatocytes and spermatids, stage-specific changes in their structure may be followed within the tubules by LSCM. Longitudinal z-sections may be obtained to produce three-dimensional images of the seminiferous tubules. In addition, different proteins may be followed during spermatogenesis in a stage specific manner within the tubule by incubation of the fixed seminiferous tubules with appropriate antibodies. As an example of the spermatogenesis studies using described LSCM techniques, detailed examination of spermatogonia, spermatocytes and spermatids during golden hamster spermatogenesis is presented. LSCM analysis of c-kit and SC3 protein expression at different stages of hamster spermatogenesis is demonstrated.