In situ molecular architecture of the mammalian sperm nuclear vacuole
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Direct identification of macromolecular complexes in their native context remains a major barrier to unbiased biological discovery. This challenge is particularly acute in mammalian sperm nuclei, in which condensed chromatin is interspersed with poorly understood phase-separated compartments termed nuclear vacuoles. Vacuoles are associated with reduced fertilization efficiency, yet their composition remains unclear. Here we combine high-resolution in situ cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) with AlphaFold docking to identify vacuole components as proteasomes, the proteasome activator PA200, and ferritin. In situ structures at resolutions up to 3.8 Å reveal distinct proteasome-PA200 associations and gating states, consistent with a stepwise activation mechanism. Ferritin assemblies exhibit heterogeneous mineralization states and directly contact chromatin. Together, these findings establish the molecular organization of sperm nuclear vacuoles and implicate protein turnover and metal homeostasis in shaping the nuclear landscape, while demonstrating the power of in situ cryo-ET to resolve protein identity and conformational dynamics in native cellular environments.