Rationale: Spermatogenesis is a highly organized cell differentiation process in mammals, involving mitosis, meiosis, and spermiogenesis. DIS3L2, which is primarily expressed in the cytoplasm, is an RNA exosome-independent ribonuclease. In female mice, Dis3l2-deficient oocytes fail to resume meiosis, resulting in arrest at the germinal vesicle stage and complete infertility. However, the role of DIS3L2 in germ cell development in males has remained largely unexplored. Methods: We established a pre-meiotic germ cell conditional knockout mouse model and investigated the biological function of DIS3L2 in spermatogenesis and male fertility through bulk RNA-seq and scRNA-seq analyses. Results: This study unveils that conditional ablation of Dis3l2 in pre-meiotic germ cells with Stra8-Cre mice impairs spermatogonial differentiation and hinders spermatocyte meiotic progression coupled with cell apoptosis. Such conditional ablation leads to defective spermatogenesis and sterility in adults. Bulk RNA-seq analysis revealed that Dis3l2 deficiency significantly disrupted the transcriptional expression pattern of genes related to the cell cycle, spermatogonial differentiation, and meiosis in Dis3l2 conditional knockout testes. Additionally, scRNA-seq analysis indicated that absence of DIS3L2 in pre-meiotic germ cells causes disrupted RNA metabolism, downregulated expression of cell cycle genes, and aberrant expression of spermatogonial differentiation genes, impeding spermatogonial differentiation. In meiotic spermatocytes, loss of DIS3L2 results in disturbed RNA metabolism, abnormal translation, and disrupted meiotic genes that perturb meiotic progression and induce cell apoptosis, leading to subsequent failure of spermatogenesis and male infertility. Conclusions: Collectively, these findings highlight the critical role of DIS3L2 ribonuclease-mediated RNA degradation in safeguarding the correct transcriptome during spermatogonial differentiation and spermatocyte meiotic progression, thus ensuring normal spermatogenesis and male fertility.
Keywords: infertility; meiosis; scRNA-seq; spermatogenesis; spermatogonia.
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