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Name: Steven W. L'Hernault NIH Grants button
Position: Professor of Biology
Trainees
Degree: Ph.D., Yale University, 1984
M.A., Hofstra University, 1978
B.A., Hofstra University, 1976
 
Programs: GMB, Full Member
BCDB, Full Member
Phone: 404 727-4204
Address: 2011 Rollins Research Center, 1510 Clifton Rd, 1940/001/1AC
Email: bioslh@biology.emory.edu
 
Research Descriptions:
Short: Developmental genetics; cell and molecular biology of C. elegans spermatogenesis and fertilization.
Long: My laboratory is interested in the proteins and processes required to assemble a fertilization-competent cell surface on spermatozoa. We study spermatogenesis and fertilization in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans because of its superior genetic and reproductive biological tools. Like mammals, the C. elegans spermatid surface must be remodeled by secretory vesicle fusion in order for cell-cell fusion to occur during fertilization. Consequently, we focus on mutants that are either directly defective in fertilization or defective in the sperm secretory vesicles (analogous the the acrosome in mammalian sperm) that must fuse to generate a fertilization-competent surface. We are currently focused on the developmental control of sperm vesicular acidification and how this relates to fertilization. We showed that the vacuolar ATPase regulates sperm vesicle acidification using genetic and pharmacological approaches. Using pH sensitive vital dyes, we discovered a mutant defective in vesicular acidification and showed that it encodes an ubiquitin E3 ligase. At least two of the seven known fertilization defective mutants encode membrane proteins that are placed on the sperm surface by secretory vesicle fusion. We are currently exploring how acidification of sperm secretory vesicles prepares them to deliver proteins to the spermatozoon surface so that it can participate in fertilization.
 

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