首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The binding of sperm to the zona pellucida is an integral part of the mammalian fertilization process, investigated most extensively in the mouse. Several sperm receptors for the murine zona pellucida have been studied (Snell WJ, White JM. 1996. Cell 85:629-637; Wassarman PM. 1999. Cell 96:175-183), but the most compelling evidence exists for beta-1,4-galactosyltransferase (GalTase). Considering that GalTase is present on the surface of porcine sperm (Larson JL, Miller DJ. 1997. Biol Reprod 57:442-453), we investigated the role of GalTase in porcine sperm-zona binding. Sperm surface GalTase catalyzed the addition of uridine diphosphate-[(3)H]galactose to the 55 kDa group of the porcine zona pellucida proteins implicated in sperm binding, demonstrating that GalTase binds the porcine zona. The functional importance of GalTase-zona pellucida binding was tested. Addition of uridine diphosphate galactose, a substrate that completes the GalTase enzymatic reaction and disrupts GalTase mediated adhesion, had no effect on binding of sperm to porcine oocytes. Furthermore, removal of the GalTase zona ligand by incubation of oocytes with N-acetylglucosaminidase had no effect on binding of sperm to oocytes. These results suggest that GalTase is not necessary for sperm to bind to the zona pellucida. Digestion of isolated porcine zona proteins with N-acetylglucosaminidase did not affect the biological activity of soluble porcine zona proteins in competitive sperm-zona binding assays, suggesting that GalTase alone is not sufficient to mediate sperm-zona attachment. From these results, it appears that, although GalTase is able to bind porcine zona proteins, its function in porcine sperm-zona binding is not necessary or sufficient for sperm-zona binding. This supports the contention that porcine sperm-zona binding requires redundant gamete receptors.  相似文献   

2.
Murine cauda epididymal sperm contain sites on the plasma membrane over the apical portion of the acrosome that recognize proteinase inhibitors and the homologous zona pellucida. Ten times more of the component can be extracted from cauda and ductus sperm than from equal numbers of caput and corpus sperm. Likewise, few sperm from the upper epididymal regions are able to bind seminal inhibitor, while the majority of sperm from the cauda and ductus do bind. Cauda epididymal and ductus sperm lose little of their ability to bind inhibitor after a 4-hour in vitro incubation in either a capacitating or a noncapacitating medium. The percentage of naturally inseminated sperm with the seminal inhibitor bound to their surface decreases to about 10 after 4 hours in utero. Approximately 80% of these sperm show positive fluorescence when given the opportunity to rebind the inhibitor, and these sperm do have an intact plasma membrane over the apical portion of the acrosome. Furthermore, after 4 hours in utero, the inhibitor bound in the same region of the sperm head as it did on freshly ejaculated sperm. The seminal inhibitor inhibits the binding of sperm to the zona if added during the first 15 minutes of incubation but has no effect on attachment. The data indicate that sperm gain the ability to bind the seminal inhibitor during the epididymal sojourn. Furthermore, this binding capacity is not lost during in vitro or in utero incubation. The site is not involved in sperm-zona attachment but does participate in the binding of sperm to the zona.  相似文献   

3.
Washed ejaculated boar sperm and sperm from the cauda epididymis bind to the zona pellucida of fixed porcine eggs in large numbers. Sperm incubated in the presence of dextran sulfate (8 K daltons or 500 K daltons) or fucoidan and then washed no longer bind to eggs. Other acid carbohydrates (heparin, chondroitin sulfates, inositol hexasulfate, carboxymethylcellulose) fail to block sperm-egg binding even when added directly to sperm-egg suspensions. Seminal plasma and the seminal vesicle secretion contain basic proteins which bind tightly to sperm and bind reversibly to eggs preventing sperm from binding to eggs. When dextran sulfate or fucoidan are mixed with the vesicular secretion, from which seminal plasma basic proteins originate (Hunt et al., '83), the secretion loses the capacity to prevent sperm from binding to eggs; this suggests that seminal vesicle proteins can bind to the same site on zonae as do sperm and thus seminal plasma may modify sperm-egg interactions. Corpus and cauda epididymal sperm also bind in large numbers to the zona pellucida of isolated eggs but high concentrations of caput sperm, which exhibit high motility in the presence of caffeine, bind only in few numbers. Thus a component that enhances sperm-zona binding is apparently formed on the plasma membranes of uncapacitated sperm during passage through the epididymis. This finding, and an earlier observation that antibodies raised against uncapacitated sperm plasma membranes block sperm-egg binding in vivo (Peterson et al., '83) suggest that this component may be involved in sperm zona interaction in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
beta-1,4-Galactosyltransferase (GalTase) is present on the surface of mouse sperm, where it functions during fertilization by binding to oligosaccharide residues in the egg zona pellucida. The specific oligosaccharide substrates for sperm GalTase reside on the glycoprotein ZP3, which possesses both sperm-binding and acrosome reaction-inducing activity. A variety of reagents that perturb sperm GalTase activity inhibit sperm binding to the zona pellucida, including UDP-galactose, N-acetylglucosamine, alpha-lactalbumin, and anti-GalTase Fab fragments. However, none of these reagents are able to cross-link GalTase within the membrane nor are they able to induce the acrosome reaction. On the other hand, intact anti-GalTase IgG blocks sperm-zona binding as well as induces the acrosome reaction. Anti-GalTase IgG induces the acrosome reaction by aggregating GalTase on the sperm plasma membrane, as shown by the inability of anti-Gal-Tase Fab fragments to induce the acrosome reaction unless cross-linked with goat anti-rabbit IgG. These data suggest that zona pellucida oligosaccharides induce the acrosome reaction by clustering GalTase on the sperm surface.  相似文献   

5.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,126(6):1573-1583
Sperm surface beta 1,4-galactosyltransferase (GalTase) mediates fertilization in mice by binding to specific O-linked oligosaccharide ligands on the egg coat glycoprotein ZP3. Before binding the egg, sperm GalTase is masked by epididymally derived glycosides that are shed from the sperm surface during capacitation. After binding the egg, sperm- bound oligosaccharides on ZP3 induce the acrosome reaction by receptor aggregation, presumably involving GalTase. In this study, we asked how increasing the levels of sperm surface GalTase would affect sperm-egg interactions using transgenic mice that overexpress GalTase under the control of a heterologous promoter. GalTase expression was elevated in many tissues in adult transgenic animals, including testis. Sperm from transgenic males had approximately six times the wild-type level of surface GalTase protein, which was localized appropriately on the sperm head as revealed by indirect immunofluorescence. As expected, sperm from transgenic mice bound more radiolabeled ZP3 than did wild-type sperm. However, sperm from transgenic animals were relatively unable to bind eggs, as compared to sperm from wild-type animals. The mechanistic basis for the reduced egg-binding ability of transgenic sperm was attributed to alterations in two GalTase-dependent events. First, transgenic sperm that overexpress surface GalTase bound more epididymal glycoside substrates than did sperm from wild-type mice, thus masking GalTase and preventing it from interacting with its zona pellucida ligand. Second, those sperm from transgenic mice that were able to bind the zona pellucida were hypersensitive to ZP3, such that they underwent precocious acrosome reactions and bound to eggs more tenuously than did wild-type sperm. These results demonstrate that sperm-egg binding requires an optimal, rather than maximal, level of surface GalTase expression, since increasing this level decreases sperm reproductive efficiency both before and after egg binding. Although sperm GalTase is required for fertilization by serving as a receptor for the egg zona pellucida, excess surface GalTase is counterproductive to successful sperm-egg binding.  相似文献   

6.
Past studies from this laboratory have suggested that mouse sperm binding to the egg zona pellucida is mediated by a sperm galactosyltransferase (GalTase), which recognizes and binds to terminal N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) residues in the zona pellucida (Shur, B. D., and N. G. Hall, 1982, J. Cell Biol. 95:567-573; 95:574-579). We now present evidence that directly supports this mechanism for gamete binding. GalTase was purified to homogeneity by sequential affinity-chromatography on GlcNAc-agarose and alpha-lactalbumin-agarose columns. The purified enzyme produced a dose-dependent inhibition of sperm binding to the zona pellucida, relative to controls. To inhibit sperm/zona binding, GalTase had to retain its native conformation, since neither heat-inactivated nor Mn++-deficient GalTase inhibited sperm binding. GalTase inhibition of sperm/zona binding was not due to steric blocking of an adjacent sperm receptor on the zona, since GalTase could be released from the zona pellucida by forced galactosylation with UDPGal, and the resulting galactosylated zona was still incapable of binding sperm. In control experiments, when UDPGal was replaced with the inappropriate sugar nucleotide, UDPglucose, sperm binding to the zona pellucida remained normal after the adsorbed GalTase was washed away. The addition of UDPGal produced a dose-dependent inhibition of sperm/zona binding, and also dissociated preformed sperm/zona adhesions by catalyzing the release of the sperm GalTase from its GlcNAc substrate in the zona pellucida. Under identical conditions, UDP-glucose had no effect on sperm binding to the zona pellucida. The ability of UDPGal to dissociate sperm/zona adhesions was both time- and temperature-dependent. UDPGal produced nearly total inhibition of sperm/zona binding when the zonae pellucidae were first galactosylated to reduce the number of GalTase binding sites. Finally, monospecific anti-GalTase IgG and its Fab fragments produced a dose-dependent inhibition of sperm/zona binding and concomitantly blocked sperm GalTase catalytic activity. Preimmune IgG or anti-mouse brain IgG, which also binds to the sperm surface, had no effect. The sperm GalTase was localized by indirect immunofluorescence to a discrete plasma membrane domain on the dorsal surface of the anterior head overlying the intact acrosome. These results, along with earlier studies, show clearly that sperm GalTase serves as a principal gamete receptor during fertilization.  相似文献   

7.
ZP3 is a protein in the mammalian egg coat (zona pellucida) that binds sperm and stimulates acrosomal exocytosis, enabling sperm to penetrate the zona pellucida. The nature of the ZP3 receptor/s on sperm is a matter of considerable debate, but most evidence suggests that ZP3 binds to beta-1,4-galactosyltransferase-I (GalTase) on the sperm surface. It has been suggested that ZP3 induces the acrosome reaction by crosslinking GalTase, activating a heterotrimeric G protein. In this regard, acrosomal exocytosis is sensitive to pertussis toxin and the GalTase cytoplasmic domain can precipitate G(i) from sperm lysates. Sperm from mice that overexpress GalTase bind more soluble ZP3 and show accelerated G protein activation, whereas sperm from mice with a targeted deletion in GalTase have markedly less ability to bind soluble ZP3, undergo the ZP3-induced acrosome reaction, and penetrate the zona pellucida. We have examined the ability of GalTase to function as a ZP3 receptor and to activate heterotrimeric G proteins using Xenopus laevis oocytes as a heterologous expression system. Oocytes that express GalTase bound ZP3 but did not bind other zona pellucida glycoproteins. After oocyte maturation, ZP3 or GalTase antibodies were able to trigger cortical granule exocytosis and activation of GalTase-expressing eggs. Pertussis toxin inhibited GalTase-induced egg activation. Consistent with G protein activation, both ZP3 and anti-GalTase antibodies increased GTP-gamma[(35)S] binding as well as GTPase activity in membranes from eggs expressing GalTase. Finally, mutagenesis of a putative G protein activation motif within the GalTase cytoplasmic domain eliminated G protein activation in response to ZP3 or anti-GalTase antibodies. These results demonstrate directly that GalTase functions as a ZP3 receptor and following aggregation, is capable of activating pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins leading to exocytosis.  相似文献   

8.
《The Journal of cell biology》1987,105(4):1663-1670
Gamete recognition in the mouse is mediated by galactosyltransferase (GalTase) on the sperm surface, which binds to its appropriate glycoside substrate in the egg zona pellucida (Lopez, L. C., E. M. Bayna, D. Litoff, N. L. Shaper, J. H. Shaper, and B. D. Shur, 1985, J. Cell Biol., 101:1501-1510). GalTase has been localized by indirect immunofluorescence to the dorsal surface of the anterior sperm head overlying the intact acrosome. Sperm binding to the zona pellucida triggers induction of the acrosome reaction, an exocytotic event that results in vesiculation and release of the outer acrosomal and overlying plasma membranes. Consequently, we examined the fate of sperm surface GalTase after the acrosome reaction. Contrary to our expectations, surface GalTase is not lost during the acrosome reaction despite the loss of its membrane domain. Rather, double-label indirect immunofluorescence assays show that GalTase is redistributed to the lateral surface of the sperm, coincident with the acrosome reaction. This apparent redistribution of GalTase was confirmed by direct enzymatic assays, which show that 90% of sperm GalTase activity is retained during the acrosome reaction. No GalTase activity is detectable on plasma membrane vesicles released during the acrosome reaction. In contrast, removal of plasma membranes by nitrogen cavitation releases GalTase activity from the sperm surface, showing that GalTase redistribution requires a physiological acrosome reaction. The selective redistribution of GalTase to a new membrane domain from one that is lost during the acrosome reaction suggests that GalTase is repositioned for some additional function after initial sperm-zona binding.  相似文献   

9.
Murine cauda epididymal sperm preincubated in either a modified Krebs-Ringer or M 199 solution bind to cumulus-free, zona pellucida-intact eggs. Pretreatment of such eggs with an affinity purified preparation of the seminal inhibitor binding component (acceptor), isolated from epididymal sperm, reduces in a concentration dependent manner, the number of sperm that bind. Treatment of cauda sperm, preincubated in either of the above two media, with the seminal inhibitor, also reduces the number of sperm able to bind. Incubation of cauda sperm in the Krebs-Ringer solution for up to 4 h does not affect their ability to bind the seminal inhibitor. Omission of bovine serum albumin from the preincubation medium results in a significant reduction in sperm binding. These data are interpreted to mean that the seminal inhibitor acceptor sites on the sperm surface of incubated sperm function in the in vitro binding to the zona pellucida.  相似文献   

10.
The identity of the sperm surface protein(s) responsible for sperm-zona pellucida binding in the mouse, as well as the characteristics of the oligosaccharide groups on zona pellucida glycoprotein 3 (ZP3) having ligand activity toward this receptor, remain controversial. Conflicting results from several groups have made interpretation of the current data difficult. By developing a quantitative binding assay to evaluate the molecular interactions between mammalian sperm and the zona pellucida during initial gamete interactions, we directly quantified sperm-ZP binding interactions at the molecular level for the first time. The ZP binding assay demonstrated that live, capacitated mouse sperm bind solubilized 125I-labeled ZP glycoproteins in a concentration-dependent manner characterized by a rapid forward rate constant of 3.0 × 107 M−1 min−1. Following the initial characterization, the binding assay was used to examine the roles of the sperm surface enzymes galactosyltransferase (GalTase) and fucosyltransferase (FucTase) in sperm-zone pellucida binding in the mouse. These data indicate that substrates for FucTase, but not for GalTase, inhibit sperm-ZP binding, in contrast to earlier reports in which GalTase substrates significantly inhibited sperm binding to intact ZPs. A model is presented which resolves conflicting results between assays using intact ZPs and the results obtained here using soluble 125I-ZPs. Assuming a complex binding/recognition site, monosaccharides that could occupy part of the binding site would have a dramatic effect on sperm-ZP binding to the intact ZP, since they need only occupy the binding sites for a short time (∼ 100 msec) to disrupt binding. The current results suggest that the sperm ZP3 receptor binding site minimally recognizes the galβ1,3GlcNAc moiety also recognized by FucTases. The current data do not exclude the possibility that additional sugar residues form part of the ligand oligosaccharide group and are recognized by a yet-to-be-identified sperm surface protein which serves as the ZP3 receptor. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Development of the sperm's capacity to interact with the zona pellucida was investigated at the stage when the acrosome reaction (AR) is induced. The response of epididymal sperm to agents that affect the occurrence of the AR was used to monitor maturational changes. Despite the finding that sperm from the three main epididymal regions were competent to undergo ARs induced by the divalent cation ionophore A23187 (56% AR, 74% AR, and 83% AR in caput, corpus, and cauda, respectively), the cells' responses to solubilized zonae pellucidae were different. When challenged with 5 zonae equivalents/microliter, both corpus and cauda sperm shed their acrosomes in high numbers (75% AR and 86% AR, respectively), whereas caput sperm did not (23% AR). Previous work has shown that the presence of M42 monoclonal antibody (mAb) during in vitro and in vivo fertilization inhibits sperm penetration through the zona pellucida by specific interference with zonae pellucidae-induced ARs. In this study, presence of the M42 mAb did not affect the incidence of A23187-induced ARs, whereas the zona-induced ARs that occurred in both corpus and cauda sperm were inhibited fully with M42 immunoglobulin (Ig) G. In addition, the antigen recognized by M42 mAb on sperm, termed M42 Ag, was examined during epididymal maturation. Although antigen localization appeared indistinguishable by immunofluorescence on sperm taken from the caput, corpus, and cauda regions of the epididymis, modification of this antigen during epididymal transit was detected. Equilibrium-binding studies using 125I-M42 IgG demonstrated a progressive increase during epididymal transit in the amount of M42 mAb that bound to fixed cells. Corpus and cauda sperm bound 185% and 240%, respectively, of the 125I-M42 IgG detected on caput sperm. These changes in expression of M42 Ag paralleled a structural change: the Mr of the antigen decreased from a 195,000/210,000 doublet in caput sperm to a 185,000/200,000 doublet in corpus and cauda sperm, as determined by immunoblot analysis of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-extracted sperm. Results presented here demonstrate that mouse sperm develop the capacity to undergo a zona-induced AR during epididymal maturation. The M42 antigen, which is involved in the zona-induced AR, is modified during epididymal transit coincident with development of the sperm's responsiveness to zonae. Our working hypothesis, based on these results, is that development of the sperm's capacity to undergo a physiological AR is related to modification of M42 Ag.  相似文献   

12.
Rat spermatozoa from the proximal caput, the proximal corpus, the middle corpus, and the distal cauda epididymidis were examined for their ability to bind to the zona pellucida after a 1-, 2.5-, or 4.5-h incubation at 34°C with rat eggs in cumulus. Caput spermatozoa did not bind to the zona after 1, 2.5, or 4.5 h of incubation. Corpus spermatozoa did bind to the zona, but the percentage of eggs with bound spermatozoa and number of bound spermatozoa per egg increased with the length of incubation. Cauda spermatozoa bound readily to the zona pellucida, and their zona binding ability did not change with longer incubations. It thus appears that rat spermatozoa gradually acquire the ability to bind to the zona pellucida in the corpus epididymidis. The zona-binding capacity of cold immobilized cauda spermatozoa, defined as the percentage of eggs with bound spermatozoa, increased with the number of spermatozoa incubated and reached a plateau characteristic of the endocrine status of the animal. After castration, zona-binding ability is progressively lost from day 3 until day 10 where it is nil. Testosterone supplementation maintains zona-binding ability to control levels. Similarly, fertilizing ability declines from day 5 after castration until day 10. Testosterone prevents this loss of fertilizing ability. It thus appears that the development of zona-binding ability during epididymal transit is, like the development of fertilizing ability, under androgen regulation. The close correlation between the onset of fertilizing ability and zona-binding ability during maturation, the loss of fertilizing ability and zona-binding ability after castration, and the recovery of both fertilizing ability and zona-binding ability with testosterone treatment suggests that the androgen-dependent development of zona-binding ability is an important component of the acquisition of sperm fertilizing ability during epididymal transit.  相似文献   

13.
Mammalian spermatozoa undergo changes in morphology, composition, and function during transit through the epididymis. These changes correlate with acquisition by sperm of the ability to fertilize ova. It has been found that sperm from the cauda epididymidis, but not those from the caput epididymidis, are able to bind to the zona pellucida. This would imply a modification in sperm surface characteristics. Biochemical and immunological studies have demonstrated changes in sperm surface composition during epididymal maturation. These changes involve addition of epididymal secretory products to the sperm surface, loss or alteration of existing sperm surface molecules, and possibly the unmasking of preexisting molecules or epitopes. Several laboratories have studied the epididymal secretory proteins in the rat, but a consensus has not been reached on the identification, characterization, source, and sperm surface association of these proteins. Monoclonal antibodies are beginning to be used to characterize sperm surface components and sperm maturation antigens. They are proving to be valuable tools for the dissection of epididymal maturation when used in conjunction with biochemical and physiological approaches.  相似文献   

14.
Gamete recognition in the mouse is mediated, in part, by the binding of sperm surface galactosyltransferase (GalTase) to appropriate substrates in the egg zona pellucida. In this paper, sperm GalTase is shown to be an externally oriented, integral plasma membrane component. GalTase is not peripherally adsorbed to the cell surface, nor is it bound to cell surface glycoside substrates. GalTase can be released from the surface of intact sperm by either mild proteolysis or by detergent under conditions in which the sperm membranes remain intact as judged by double-label indirect immunofluorescence. Detergent-solubilized sperm GalTase has been purified to apparent homogeneity by affinity chromatography and characterized as a beta 1,4-GlcNAc:GalTase by substrate and kinetic analyses. Purified and membrane-bound GalTase both show an unusual thermal inactivation above 39-40 degrees C, whereas other sperm enzyme activities as well as GalTase activity from other cell types are temperature-dependent. Purified sperm GalTase inhibits sperm binding to the egg zona pellucida, consistent with its proposed role during gamete recognition.  相似文献   

15.
Male mice lacking ADAM2 (fertilin beta) or ADAM3 (cyritestin) are infertile; cauda epididymal sperm (mature sperm) from these mutant mice cannot bind to the egg zona pellucida. ADAM3 is barely present in Adam2-null sperm, despite normal levels of this protein in Adam2-null testicular germ cells (TGCs; sperm precursor cells). Here, we have explored the molecular basis for the loss of ADAM3 in Adam2-null TGCs to clarify the biosynthetic and functional linkage of ADAM2 and ADAM3. A small portion of total ADAM3 was found present on the surface of wild-type and Adam2(-/-) TGCs at similar levels. In the Adam2-null TGCs, however, surface-localized ADAM3 exhibited an increased amount of an endoglycosidase H-resistant form that may be related to instability of ADAM3. Moreover, we found a complex between ADAM2 and ADAM3 on the surface of TGCs and sperm. The intracellular chaperone calnexin was a component of the testicular ADAM2-ADAM3 complex. Our findings suggest that the association with ADAM2 is a key element for stability of ADAM3 in epididymal sperm. The presence of the ADAM2-ADAM3 complex in sperm also suggests a potential role of ADAM2 with ADAM3 in sperm binding to the egg zona pellucida.  相似文献   

16.
Past studies have suggested that mouse sperm surface galactosyltransferase may participate during fertilization by binding N- acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) residues in the zona pellucida. In this paper, we examined further the role of sperm surface galactosyltransferase in mouse fertilization. Two reagents that specifically perturb sperm surface galactosyltransferase activity both inhibit sperm-zona binding. The presence of the milk protein alpha- lactalbumin specifically modifies the substrate specificity of sperm galactosyltransferase away from GlcNAc and towards glucose and simultaneously inhibits sperm binding to the zona pellucida. Similarly, UDP-dialdehyde inhibits sperm binding to the zona pellucida and sperm surface galactosyl-transferase activity to identical degrees. Of five other sperm enzymes assayed, four are unaffected by UDP-dialdehyde, and one is affected only slightly. Covalent linkage of UDP-dialdehyde to sperm dramatically inhibits binding to eggs, while treatment of eggs with UDP-dialdehyde has no effect on sperm binding. Heat-solubilized or pronase-digested zona pellucida inhibit sperm-zona binding, and they can be glycosylated by sperm with UDP-galactose. Sperm are also able to glycosylate intact zona pellucida with UDP-galactose. Thus, solubilized and intact zona pellucida act as substrates for sperm surface GlcNAc:galactosyltransferases. Finally, pretreatment of eggs with beta- N-acetylglucosaminidase inhibits sperm binding by up to 86%, while under identical conditions, pretreatment with beta-galactosidase increases sperm binding by 55%. These studies, in conjunction with those of the preceding paper dealing with surface galactosyltransferase changes during capacitation, directly suggest that galactosyltransferase is at least one of the components necessary for sperm binding to the zona pellucida.  相似文献   

17.
Recent studies of mouse fertilization have identified two complementary gamete receptors that mediate sperm-egg binding. Sperm surface β1,4-galactosyltransferase (GalTase) binds to specific oligosaccharides of the egg coat (zona pellucida) glycoprotein ZP3. Evidence suggests that these same molecules may stimulate the acrosome reaction in sperm. After the acrosome reaction, it is thought that sperm remain adherent to the zona by binding another glycoprotein, ZP2. The acrosome-reacted sperm releases hydrolytic enzymes, including acrosin and N-acetylglucosaminidase, enabling it to penetrate the zona pellucida. After the penetrating sperm binds to the egg membrane and activates development, N-acetylglucosaminidase is exocytosed from egg cortical granules and, as part of the zona block to polyspermy, globally removes the sperm GalTase binding site from ZP3 oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

18.
We have previously shown that sperm-egg recognition in the mouse is mediated by the binding of galactosyltransferase (GalTase) on the sperm surface to its appropriate glycoside substrate in the egg zona pellucida [L. C. Lopez, E. M. Bayna, D. Litoff, N. L. Shaper, J. H. Shaper, and B. D. Shur (1985) J. Cell Biol. 101, 1501-1510]. In the present study, we have defined the spatial and temporal expression of surface GalTase during spermatogenesis and epididymal maturation. Purified populations of spermatogenic cells were isolated by unit gravity sedimentation, and surface GalTase expression was determined by indirect immunofluorescence and by direct enzymatic assay. GalTase is present on the surface of all spermatogenic cells assayed. During differentiation, there is a progressive redistribution of GalTase from an initially diffuse and uniform localization on the surface of primary spermatocytes to a restricted plasma membrane domain overlying the dorsal aspect of the mature acrosome. This apparent redistribution of surface GalTase was confirmed by direct enzymatic assays, which show that surface GalTase activity, normalized per cell, remains relatively constant throughout spermatogenesis, despite a drastic reduction in cell surface area. When normalized to the relevant cell surface area, the GalTase concentration per square micrometer increases 77-fold from pachytene spermatocytes to cauda epididymal sperm. Cell surface GalTase is thought to be a cytoskeletally associated transmembrane protein [N. L. Shaper, P. L. Mann, and J. H. Shaper (1985) J. Cell Biochem. 28, 229-239]; consequently we examined whether cytoskeletal components may be involved in the redistribution of GalTase during spermatogenesis. beta-Tubulin, monomeric actin, and filamentous actin were found to be present during spermatogenesis, as assayed by indirect immunofluorescence and by Western immunoblotting. alpha-Actinin and vinculin were not detectable under these conditions and served as negative controls. During spermatogenesis, the distribution of tubulin coincides with the appearance of the mitotic spindle, flagellum, and manchette. On the other hand, the distribution of filamentous actin coincides with surface GalTase, suggesting that actin-containing microfilaments may participate in the redistribution of surface GalTase during spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
The binding of the spermatozoon to the zona pellucida is a species-specific phenomenon. We have previously shown that the binding of hamster sperm to the homologous zona pellucida involves a sperm 26-kDa glycoprotein, the P26h, originating in the epididymis. In order to establish to what extent this sperm protein is involved in the species-specific recognition of the egg's extracellular coat, we have compared the inhibitory properties of anti-P26h antibodies in a sperm-zona pellucida assay using hamster and mouse gametes. Anti-P26h IgGs inhibit, in a dose-dependent manner, gamete interactions in both species, although in a less efficient manner in the mouse than in the hamster. While anti-26kDa Fab fragments are as efficient as the intact IgG to inhibit hamster sperm-zona pellucida binding, they have no effect on mouse gamete interaction. ELISA, Western blot, and immunohistochemical experiments have been performed in order to characterize the mouse antigen(s) recognized by the anti-P26h antiserum. ELISA and Western blots showed that this antiserum recognized two proteins on mouse spermatozoa that are less reactive than the hamster P26h. These antigens are localized in the acrosomal region of epididymal spermatozoa of both species. These results indicate that the hamster P26H involved in zona pellucida interaction has certain unique epitopes, while others are common to the sperm of both species. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
After the acrosome reaction, the PH-20 surface antigen of guinea pig sperm migrates from its original location on the posterior head surface to a new location on the inner acrosomal membrane (Myles, D.G., and P. Primakoff, 1984, J. Cell Biol., 99:1634-1641). We have isolated three monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) of the IgG1 subclass, PH-20, PH-21, and PH-22, that bind to the PH-20 antigen. The PH-20 MAb strongly inhibited (approximately 90%) sperm binding to the guinea pig egg zona pellucida at saturating antibody concentrations (greater than 20 micrograms/ml). Half-maximal inhibition of sperm binding to the zona was obtained with approximately 2 micrograms/ml PH-20 MAb. The PH-21 MAb at saturating concentration (50 micrograms/ml) partially inhibited (approximately 45%) sperm-zona binding, and the PH-22 MAb (50 micrograms/ml) did not inhibit (0%) sperm-zona binding. Essentially the same amounts of the three MAbs were bound to sperm under the conditions where inhibition (PH-20, PH-21) or no inhibition (PH-22) of sperm-zona binding was observed, which indicates that the different levels of inhibition did not arise from different levels of MAb binding. Competition binding assays with 125I-labeled MAbs showed that PH-21 binding to sperm was not affected by the binding of PH-20 or PH-22. However, that PH-20 and PH-22 blocked each other's binding to sperm suggests that their recognized determinants may be relatively close to one another. The results indicate that the migrating PH-20 antigen has a required function in sperm binding to the zona pellucida and that the PH-20 MAb affects is active site.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号