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Dive into the research topics where Melissa K. Jungnickel is active.

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Featured researches published by Melissa K. Jungnickel.


Nature Cell Biology | 2001

Trp2 regulates entry of Ca2+ into mouse sperm triggered by egg ZP3.

Melissa K. Jungnickel; Héctor G. Marrero; Lutz Birnbaumer; José R. Lemos; Harvey M. Florman

In many cells, receptor activation initiates sustained Ca2+ entry which is critical in signal transduction. Mammalian transient receptor potential (Trp) proteins, which are homologous to the Drosophila photoreceptor-cell Trp protein, have emerged as candidate subunits of the ion channels that mediate this influx. As a consequence of overexpression, these proteins produce cation currents that open either after depletion of internal Ca2+ stores or through receptor activation. However, determining the role of endogenous Trp proteins in signal transduction is complicated by the absence of selective antagonists. Here we examine Trp function during sperm–egg interaction. The sperm acrosome reaction is a Ca2+-dependent secretory event that must be completed before fertilization. In mammals, exocytosis is triggered during gamete contact by ZP3, a glycoprotein constituent of the eggs extracellular matrix, or zona pellucida (ZP). ZP3 activates trimeric G proteins and phospholipase C and causes a transient Ca2+ influx into sperm through T-type Ca2+ channels. These early responses promote a second Ca2+-entry pathway, thereby producing sustained increases in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) that drive acrosome reactions. Our results show that Trp2 is essential for the activation of sustained Ca2+ influx into sperm by ZP3.


The International Journal of Developmental Biology | 2008

Regulating the acrosome reaction

Harvey M. Florman; Melissa K. Jungnickel; Keith A. Sutton

The acrosome reaction is a secretory event that must be completed by the sperm of many animal species prior to fusion with eggs. In mammals, exocytosis in triggered by ZP3, a glycoprotein component of the egg pellucida, following gamete contact. ZP3 promotes a sustained influx of Ca2+ into sperm that is necessary for the acrosome reaction. Here, we discuss the mechanism by which ZP3 generates Ca2+ entry, as well as the upstream events leading to this influx and downstream processes that couple it with exocytosis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

A polycystin-1 controls postcopulatory reproductive selection in mice

Keith A. Sutton; Melissa K. Jungnickel; Harvey M. Florman

Pkdrej, a member of the polycystin-1 gene family, is expressed only in the male germ line. Male mice that are homozygous for a targeted mutation in the Pkdrej allele (Pkdrejtm/tm) are fertile in unrestricted mating trials, but exhibit lower reproductive success when competing with wild-type males in sequential mating trials and in artificial insemination of mixed-sperm populations. Following mating, sperm from Pkdrejtm/tm mice require >2 h longer than those of wild-type males to be detected within the egg/cumulus complex in the oviduct. Sperm from mice of both genotypes are able to capacitate in vitro. However, one of the component processes of capacitation, the ability to undergo a zona pellucida–evoked acrosome reaction, develops more slowly in sperm from Pkdrejtm/tm animals than in sperm from wild-type males. In contrast, a second component process of capacitation, the transition to hyperactivated flagellar motility, develops with a similar time course in both genotypes. These two behavioral consequences of capacitation, exocytotic competence and altered motility, are therefore differentially regulated. These data suggest that Pkdrej controls the timing of fertilization in vivo through effects on sperm transport and exocytotic competence and is a factor in postcopulatory sexual selection.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2006

Functional characterization of PKDREJ, a male germ cell-restricted polycystin.

Keith A. Sutton; Melissa K. Jungnickel; Christopher J. Ward; Peter C. Harris; Harvey M. Florman

Polycystin‐1 regulates a number of cellular processes through the formation of complexes with the polycystin‐2 ion channel or with other signal transduction proteins. Polycystin‐1 is expressed in many tissues but other members of this gene family are distributed in a more restricted fashion. PKDREJ expression has been detected only in the mammalian testis, where it is restricted to the spermatogenic lineage and retained in mature sperm. However, the functional characteristics of this protein and its role in sperm biology are not well understood. In this study it is shown that PKDREJ can modulate G protein signaling and associates with several members of the polycystin‐2 family. These interactions, as well as polycystin‐2 association with TRPC channels, are consistent with a role of this protein in the regulation of the acrosome reaction and in other aspects of sperm physiology. J. Cell. Physiol. 209: 493–500, 2006.


Cell | 2003

In the Beginning: Lessons from Fertilization in Mice and Worms

Melissa K. Jungnickel; Keith A. Sutton; Harvey M. Florman

Sexual reproduction proceeds by fertilization; formation of new individuals by the union of haploid gametes. Recent reports in Cell and in Developmental Cell may provide new insights as to how this process begins and is regulated.


Cell | 2010

Shedding light on sperm pHertility

Harvey M. Florman; Melissa K. Jungnickel; Keith A. Sutton

The acquisition of fertilization capacity by sperm is regulated by intracellular pH (pH(i)), but the transport pathways that regulate pH(i) are not well understood. Lishko et al. (2010) now report that Hv1, the voltage-sensitive proton channel, is present in human sperm and is an important regulator of the functional maturation of sperm.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2012

Evolution of the voltage sensor domain of the voltage-sensitive phosphoinositide phosphatase, VSP/TPTE, suggests a role as a proton channel in eutherian mammals

Keith A. Sutton; Melissa K. Jungnickel; Luca Jovine; Harvey M. Florman

The voltage-sensitive phosphoinositide phosphatases provide a mechanism to couple changes in the transmembrane electrical potential to intracellular signal transduction pathways. These proteins share a domain architecture that is conserved in deuterostomes. However, gene duplication events in primates, including humans, give rise to the paralogs TPTE and TPTE2 that retain protein domain organization but, in the case of TPTE, have lost catalytic activity. Here, we present evidence that these human proteins contain a functional voltage sensor, similar to that in nonmammalian orthologs. However, domains of these human proteins can also generate a noninactivating outward current that is not observed in zebra fish or tunicate orthologs. This outward current has the anticipated characteristics of a voltage-sensitive proton current and is due to the appearance of a single histidine residue in the S4 transmembrane segment of the voltage sensor. Histidine is observed at this position only during the eutherian radiation. Domains from both human paralogs generate proton currents. This apparent gain of proton channel function during the evolution of the TPTE protein family may account for the conservation of voltage sensor domains despite the loss of phosphatase activity in some human paralogs.


Nature Cell Biology | 2002

If music be the food of love...

Keith A. Sutton; Melissa K. Jungnickel; Harvey M. Florman

The link between hearing and reproduction has been made before, as in William Shakespeares Twelfth Night. Now, a paper in the current issue of Nature Cell Biology demonstrates that these two processes have an unforeseen degree of structural similarities.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

What can we learn about fertilization from cystic fibrosis

Harvey M. Florman; Melissa K. Jungnickel; Keith A. Sutton

It is a curious and intriguing situation that mammalian sperm are introduced into the female reproductive tract in an infertile state and must be educated there before they are able to fertilize oocytes. The recognition that mammalian sperm must first be switched into a competent state, or capacitated, was exploited in the development of in vitro fertilization methods and has proved essential for the dependent technologies of clinical assisted reproduction and infertility treatments. Yet many aspects of the mechanisms of capacitation remain unclear (for recent reviews, see refs. 1 and 2). In a recent issue of PNAS, Xu et al. (3) advanced our understanding of capacitation by showing that CFTR, the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator, plays an essential role in some aspects of this process.


Nature Cell Biology | 2003

Of fertility, cystic fibrosis and the bicarbonate ion.

Keith A. Sutton; Melissa K. Jungnickel; Harvey M. Florman

Mammalian sperm require activation within the female reproductive tract to fertilize eggs, and bicarbonate is essential for this process in vitro. A recent study implicates the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) as a possible regulator for bicarbonate release in vivo.

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Harvey M. Florman

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Keith A. Sutton

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Yanli Wang

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Chanjae Lee

University of Texas at Austin

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Claudius Werner

Boston Children's Hospital

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Galo Garcia

University of California

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Heymut Omran

Boston Children's Hospital

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Héctor G. Marrero

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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