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1.A.1.19.1
Alkalinizatioin-activated Ca2+-selective channel, sperm-associated cation channel, CatSper, required for male fertility and the hyperactivated motility of spermatozoa (Kirichok et al. 2006). These channels require auxiliary subunits, CatSperβ, γ and δ for activity (Chung et al., 2011).  The primary channel protein is CatSper1 (Liu et al., 2007), and it may be a target for immunocontraception (Li et al. 2009). CatSper channels have been reported to regulate sperm motility (Vicente-Carrillo et al. 2017). Sperm competition is selective for a disulfide-crosslinked macromolecular architecture. CatSper channel opening occurs in response to pH, 2-arachidonoylglycerol, and mechanical force. A flippase function is hypothesized, and a source of the concomitant disulfide isomerase activity is found in CatSper-associated proteins beta, delta and epsilon (Bystroff 2018). More recently, it has been reported that rotational motion and rheotaxis of human sperm do not require functional CatSper channels or transmembrane Ca2+ signaling (Schiffer et al. 2020). Instead, passive biomechanical and hydrodynamic processes may enable sperm rolling and rheotaxis, rather than calcium signaling mediated by CatSper or other mechanisms controlling transmembrane Ca2+ flux. The Ca2+ channel CatSper is not activated by cAMP/PKA signaling but directly affected by chemicals used to probe the action of cAMP and PKA (Wang et al. 2020). The cation channel of sperm (CatSper) is essential for sperm motility and fertility. CatSper comprises the pore-forming proteins CATSPER1-4 and multiple auxiliary subunits, including CATSPERbeta, gamma, delta, epsilon, zeta, and EFCAB9. Lin et al. 2021 reported the cryo-EM structure of the CatSper complex isolated from mouse sperm. CATSPER1-4 conform to the conventional domain-swapped voltage-gated ion channel fold, following a counterclockwise arrangement. The auxiliary subunits CATSPERbeta, gamma, delta and epsilon - each of which contains a single transmembrane segment and a large extracellular domain - constitute a pavilion-like structure that stabilizes the entire complex through interactions with CATSPER4, 1, 3 and 2, respectively. The EM map revealed several previously uncharacterized components, exemplified by the organic anion transporter SLCO6C1. Lin et al. 2021 named this channel-transporter ultracomplex the CatSpermasome. The assembly and organizational details of the CatSpermasome lay the foundation for the development of CatSpermasome-related treatments for male infertility and non-hormonal contraceptives. CatSper is a target for inhibition, for use in male contraception, causing inhibition of sperm motility (Mariani et al. 2023).

Accession Number:Q7RTX7
Protein Name:Cation channel sperm-associated protein 4 Aka CatSper4
Length:472
Molecular Weight:54092.00
Species:Homo sapiens (Human) [9606]
Number of TMSs:5
Location1 / Topology2 / Orientation3: Cell projection1 / Multi-pass membrane protein2
Substrate calcium(2+)

Cross database links:

RefSeq: NP_937770.1   
Entrez Gene ID: 378807   
Pfam: PF00520   
OMIM: 609121  gene
KEGG: hsa:378807   

Gene Ontology

GO:0005929 C:cilium
GO:0020017 C:flagellar membrane
GO:0016021 C:integral to membrane
GO:0005262 F:calcium channel activity
GO:0005244 F:voltage-gated ion channel activity
GO:0006816 P:calcium ion transport
GO:0030154 P:cell differentiation
GO:0007275 P:multicellular organismal development
GO:0007283 P:spermatogenesis
GO:0055085 P:transmembrane transport

References (4)

[1] “The DNA sequence and biological annotation of human chromosome 1.”  Gregory S.G.et.al.   16710414
[2] “The status, quality, and expansion of the NIH full-length cDNA project: the Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC).”  The MGC Project Teamet.al.   15489334
[3] “Identification of human and mouse CatSper3 and CatSper4 genes: characterisation of a common interaction domain and evidence for expression in testis.”  Lobley A.et.al.   12932298
[4] “Expression of CatSper family transcripts in the mouse testis during post-natal development and human ejaculated spermatozoa: relationship to sperm motility.”  Li H.-G.et.al.   17347248

External Searches:

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Predict TMSs (Predict number of transmembrane segments)
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FASTA formatted sequence
1:	MRDNEKAWWQ QWTSHTGLEG WGGTQEDRMG FGGAVAALRG RPSPLQSTIH ESYGRPEEQV 
61:	LINRQEITNK ADAWDMQEFI THMYIKQLLR HPAFQLLLAL LLVINAITIA LRTNSYLDQK 
121:	HYELFSTIDD IVLTILLCEV LLGWLNGFWI FWKDGWNILN FIIVFILLLR FFINEINIPS 
181:	INYTLRALRL VHVCMAVEPL ARIIRVILQS VPDMANIMVL ILFFMLVFSV FGVTLFGAFV 
241:	PKHFQNIQVA LYTLFICITQ DGWVDIYSDF QTEKREYAME IGGAIYFTIF ITIGAFIGIN 
301:	LFVIVVTTNL EQMMKAGEQG QQQRITFSET GAEEEEENDQ LPLVHCVVAR SEKSGLLQEP 
361:	LAGGPLSNLS ENTCDNFCLV LEAIQENLRQ YKEIRDELNM IVEEVRAIRF NQEQESEVLN 
421:	RRSSTSGSLE TTSSKDIRQM SQQQDLLSAL VSMEKVHDSS SQILLKKHKS SH