Small Glutamine-Rich Tetratricopeptide Repeat-Containing Protein Alpha (SGTA) Ablation Limits Offspring Viability and Growth in Mice
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OPEN
received: 04 January 2016
accepted: 07 June 2016
Published: 30 June 2016
Small Glutamine-Rich
Tetratricopeptide RepeatContaining Protein Alpha (SGTA)
Ablation Limits Offspring Viability
and Growth in Mice
Lisa K. Philp1, Tanya K. Day1, Miriam S. Butler1, Geraldine Laven-Law1, Shalini Jindal1,
Theresa E. Hickey1, Howard I. Scher2, Lisa M. Butler1,3,* & Wayne D. Tilley1,3,*
Small glutamine-rich tetratricopeptide repeat-containing protein α (SGTA) has been implicated as
a co-chaperone and regulator of androgen and growth hormone receptor (AR, GHR) signalling. We
investigated the functional consequences of partial and full Sgta ablation in vivo using Cre-lox Sgtanull mice. Sgta+/− breeders generated viable Sgta−/− offspring, but at less than Mendelian expectancy.
Sgta−/− breeders were subfertile with small litters and higher neonatal death (P < 0.02). Body size was
significantly and proportionately smaller in male and female Sgta−/− (vs WT, Sgta+/− P < 0.001) from
d19. Serum IGF-1 levels were genotype- and sex-dependent. Food intake, muscle and bone mass and
adiposity were unchanged in Sgta−/−. Vital and sex organs had normal relative weight, morphology
and histology, although certain androgen-sensitive measures such as penis and preputial size, and
testis descent, were greater in Sgta−/−. Expression of AR and its targets remained largely unchanged,
although AR localisation was genotype- and tissue-dependent. Generally expression of other TPRcontaining proteins was unchanged. In conclusion, this thorough investigation of SGTA-null mutation
reports a mild phenotype of reduced body size. The model’s full potential likely will be realised by
genetic crosses with other models to interrogate the role of SGTA in the many diseases in which it has
been implicated.
Small glutamine-rich tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR)-containing protein α(SGTA) belongs to a family of molecular co-chaperone proteins that possess a TPR motif. This motif, when arrayed in tandem, forms a protein-protein
interaction module capable of facilitating interactions with a diverse range of client proteins (as reviewed in
refs 1–3). Since its discovery 15 years ago4, SGTA has been implicated in a myriad of biological processes1 including cell cycle and apoptosis5, viral assembly and release4,6–9, hormone signalling5,10–17, intracellular compartmentalization10,11, neuronal synaptic transmission18 and the post-translational transport19–22 and modification17,23 of
proteins. Due to its broad pattern of tissue expression1,24,25 (Suppl Fig. 1A,B) and its engagement in many biological processes, SGTA has been implicated in many diseases including cancer of the prostate10,26, ovary27, liver28
and oesophagus29; hormone-related polycystic ovary syndrome30; and amyloid-related Alzheimer’s18 and prion31
diseases. Given the overarching cellular role of SGTA in co-chaperoning client proteins to ensure their correct
folding, trafficking and/or appropriate subcellular movement in the aforementioned biological processes1, it is
surprising that its essential normal biological functions remain uncharacterised.
Throughout evolution SGTA, and in particular its TPR motif, has remained conserved4,6,10,11,14,32, with orthologs to human Sgta detected in Caenorhabditis elegans32, Drosophila melanogaster33 and Saccharomyces cerevisiae32. SGTA is ubiquitously expressed in human and murine tissues, with M. musculus SGTA exhibiting 83% and
1
Adelaide Prostate Cancer Research Centre and Dame Roma Mitchell Cancer Research Laboratories, Faculty of
Health Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia. 2Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY,
USA. 3Freemason’s Foundation Centre for Men’s Health, School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University
of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia. *These authors contributed equally to this work. Correspondence and requests for
materials should be addressed to L.K.P. (email: ) or W.D.T. (email: )
Scientific Reports | 6:28950 | DOI: 10.1038/srep28950
1
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Sgta−/− x Sgta−/−
Sgta+/− x Sgta+/−
Number of Breeding Pairs
6
15
6
Number of Litters
18
40
13
Breeder Statistics
Intact Comparator
Average Litter Size (±SEM)
6.11 ( ± 0.58)†‡
7.33 ( ± 0.41)
7.54 ( ± 0.70)
Average Days to Litter (±SEM)
30.14 ( ± 3.54)
27.56 ( ± 2.18)
25.83 ( ± 2.75)
Sgta−/− x Sgta−/−
Sgta+/− x Sgta+/−
Intact Comparator
Total Pups Born
110
293
98
Live Pups Born
104 (94.55%)
288 (98.29%)
96 (97.96%)
2 (2.04%)
Offspring Statistics
Stillborn Pups
6 (5.45%)
5 (1.71%)
Neonatal Deaths
32 (30.77%)*#
39 (11.46%)
9 (9.38%)
Pups Weaned
72 (69.23%)*#
249 (86.46%)
87 (90.63%)
Male Pups Weaned
34 (47.22%)
132 (53.01%)
50 (57.47%)
Female Pups Weaned
38 (52.78%)
117 (46.99%)
37 (42.53%)
Table 1. Reproductive Demographics of Heterozygous and Homozygous Sgta-deficient Breeding Pairs.
Statistics: #P ≤ 0.05, trend †P < 0.10, vs intact; *P ≤ 0.01, trend ‡P < 0.06, vs Sgta+/−.
88% identity to human SGTA at the mRNA and protein levels, respectively, with similar distribution of functional
domains (Suppl Fig. 1D–F). Knockdown of SGTA in vitro can impair cellular proliferation (NBE, HeLa, C4-2B
cells), reduce cell viability (C4-2B cells)26 and promote cell death (NBE, HeLa cells)5,34. No study to date has
reported the effect of SGTA ablation in vivo. Given that SGTA is expressed in early development35 and has a ubiquitous co-chaperoning role, we aimed to determine the physiological importance of SGTA in vivo by assessing the
effect of SGTA ablation on normal development and fecundity in mice.
Results
Sgta−/− Mice are Viable but Tended to Exhibit Reduced Perinatal Viability. Sgta+/− breeders were
overtly normal in appearance and were fertile, with time to litter comparable to Sgta-intact animals, and viable
offspring representing all possible genotypes (Sgta−/−, Sgta+/− and WT) were produced (Table 1). Gross phenotypic inspection of offspring indicated that all were visibly normal. Sgta+/− breeders yielded litters of normal size,
with unchanged neonatal mortality rate, as compared to Sgta-intact litters (Table 1). However, the Mendelian
ratio of inheritance was altered in progeny from Sgta+/− matings; irrespective of gender, Sgta−/− pups tended to be
less frequently observed than the expected ratio (22.49% vs expected 25%, P = 0.095). However, when separated
by sex this was most pronounced for female Sgta−/− pups (18.80% vs 25.76% for males, compared to expected
25%), suggesting that female Sgta−/− mice were less viable during the perinatal period. Sex ratios did not deviate
from normal (1.06M: 0.94F vs expected 1M: 1F, P = 0.38).
Sgta Knockout was Complete and Global. Having determined that Sgta−/− mice are viable, we next
characterised the functional consequence of the Sgta disruption. The Cre/Lox knockout strategy used in this
study (Fig. 1A) involved floxing exons 4 and 5 of M. musculus Sgta for disrup (...truncated)