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1.
Polyspermically fertilized Strongylocentrotus purpuratus eggs were fixed at varying times after insemination and exposed to a monoclonal antibody (mAb J18/29) directed against a group of sperm surface antigens. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy reveals that the sperm surface components recognized by mAb J18/29 are quickly incorporated into the egg plasma membrane and begin to disperse as early as 1.5 min after insemination. At subsequent times after insemination, they undergo further dispersal so that by 45 min they are distributed evenly over the entire surface of the egg. These results provide evidence for the free lateral mobility of sperm membrane components in the fertilized egg.  相似文献   

2.
Whole mount preparations of dissociated testicular cells from the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, were exposed to monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) directed against sperm surface proteins. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy and Western immunoblot analysis show that mAb J18/29 binds to the entire surface of the mature spermatozoon and membrane proteins ranging in relative molecular masses from 25 to 340 kDa. MAb J18/2 binds to the acrosomal and tail regions of the mature spermatozoon and mainly to a 210-kDa membrane protein. MAb J17/30 binds to the midpiece and tail regions and monospecifically to a 60-kDa membrane protein. MAb J16/33 binds specifically to the sperm midpiece but does not bind to Western immunoblots of sperm membrane proteins. With the exception of J16/33, which shows a punctate binding pattern, all of these mAbs show uniform binding over the entire surface of the early spermatid. This uniform and complete surface binding is observed through all stages of spermiogenesis for mAb J18/29. By the midspermatid stage, when tail formation first begins, but before the nucleus condenses and the cytoplasm decreases in volume, localized binding patterns of mAbs J17/30 and J16/33 become evident. Localized binding of mAb J18/2 is not observed until the late spermatid stage. These results show that the sea urchin sperm surface is composed of at least four different domains and provide the first insight into differentiation of the cell surface during sea urchin spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
Freeze-fracture electron microscopy reveals that intramembrane particles are concentrated in a band encircling the posterior portion of the acrosome of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sperm. Two colloidal gold labeling methods, label-fracture and replica-staining fracture-flip, were employed to show that the plant lectin wheat germ agglutinin, which recognizes a 210 kDa sperm surface glycoprotein, binds to this localized band of intramembrane particles. Monoclonal antibody J18/2, which also recognizes the 210 kDa surface glycoprotein, shows this localized binding in approximately 20% of the sperm observed in this study. The majority of sperm displayed a uniform distribution of receptor sites for monoclonal antibody J18/2. Since wheat germ agglutinin and monoclonal antibody J18/2 are known to agglutinate Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sperm but not sperm of another sea urchin, Lytechinus pictus, similar determinations were made for the latter species. Lytechinus pictus sperm are not labeled with wheat germ agglutinin and are only sparsely labeled with monoclonal antibody J18/2. The acrosomal localizations of wheat germ agglutinin and monoclonal antibody J18/2 receptors in Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sperm are consistent with the involvement of the 210 kDa surface glycoprotein in an egg jelly-induced sperm acrosome reaction. Low-temperature post-embed labeling of thin sections with wheat germ agglutinin and monoclonal antibody J18/2 show concentrations of label within the acrosomal vesicle of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sperm, suggesting the presence of an intracellular storage site for the 210 kDa glycoprotein.  相似文献   

4.
Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) binds to the entire surface of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sperm, and inhibits the egg jelly-induced acrosome reaction. The binding was found to be species dependent and was completely inhibited by 5 mM N-acetyl-D-glucosamine. Blockage of the acrosome reaction by WGA was bypassed by a combination of the ionophores A23187 and monensin, although neither ionophore was effective individually. These experiments suggest that WGA blocks both Ca2+ uptake and Na+/H+ exchange in these sperm, which was confirmed by direct measurements of 45Ca2+ uptake and H+ efflux. The target of WGA in S. purpuratus sperm appears to be a membrane glycoprotein of Mr = 210,000. Treatment of this protein with neuraminidase or endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase F abolished WGA binding.  相似文献   

5.
An essential initial step in fertilization in the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus is an intracellular membrane fusion event in the sperm known as the acrosome reaction. This Ca2+-dependent, exocytotic process involves fusion of the membrane of the acrosomal vesicle and the plasma membrane. Recently, metalloendoproteases requiring divalent metals have been implicated in several Ca2+-dependent membrane fusion events in other biological systems. In view of the suggested involvement of Zn2+ in the sea urchin sperm acrosome reaction (Clapper, D.L., Davis, J.A., Lamothe, P.J., Patton, C., and Epel, D. (1985) J. Cell Biol. 100, 1817-1824) and the fact that Zn2+ is a metal cofactor for metalloendoproteases, we investigated the potential role of this protease in the acrosome reaction. A soluble metalloendoprotease was demonstrated and characterized in sperm homogenates using the fluorogenic protease substrate succinyl-alanine-alanine-phenylalanine-4-aminomethylcoumarin. The protease was inhibited by the metal chelators EDTA and 1,10-phenanthroline, and activity of the inactive apoenzyme could be reconstituted with Zn2+. The metalloendoprotease substrate and inhibitors blocked the acrosome reaction induced either by egg jelly coat or by ionophore, but had no effect on the influx of Ca2+. These observations suggest that inhibition occurs at a step independent of Ca2+ entry. Overall, the results of this study provide strong indirect evidence that the acrosome reaction requires the action of metalloendoprotease.  相似文献   

6.
Pretreatment of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sperm with delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) prevents the triggering of the acrosome reaction by egg jelly. Examination of THC-treated sperm by transmission electron microscopy reveals that the membrane fusion reaction between the sperm plasma membrane and the acrosomal membrane is completely blocked. Electron-dense deposits are present in the subacrosomal fossa and in the centriolar fossa. The nuclear envelope is fragmented in close proximity to the electron-dense deposits. The electron-dense deposits are not bound by a limiting membrane, stain positively for lipid with thymol and farnesol, and disappear from THC-treated sperm that are extracted with chloroform:methanol (2:1) after glutaraldehyde fixation. The electron-dense deposits are lipid in nature and may be a hydrolytic product of the nuclear envelope. Electron-dense deposits are seen in sperm after 1-10 min treatment with 5-100 microM THC. The electron-dense deposits disappear after removal of THC from the sperm by washing, but the fragmented nuclear envelope in the subacrosomal fossa persists. Cannabidiol (CBD) and cannabinol (CBN) also inhibit the triggering of the acrosome reaction by egg jelly and produce ultrastructural changes in the sperm identical to those elicited by THC. Enhanced phospholipase activity stimulated by THC, CBD, and CBN may be the cause of the accumulation of lipid deposits in the sperm. Metabolites derived from this modification of membrane phospholipids may prevent triggering of the acrosome reaction by egg jelly and thereby inhibit fertilization.  相似文献   

7.
A monoclonal antibody, J18/29, induces the acrosome reaction (AR) in spermatozoa of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. J18/29 induces increases in both intracellular Ca2+ and intracellular pH similar to those occurring upon induction of the AR by the natural inducer, the fucose sulfate-rich glycoconjugate of egg jelly. Lowering the Ca2+ concentration or the pH of the seawater inhibits the J18/29-induced AR, as does treatment with Co2+, an inhibitor of Ca2+ channels. The J18/29-induced AR is also inhibited by verapamil, tetraethylammonium chloride, and elevated K+. All these treatments cause similar inhibition of the egg jelly-induced AR. J18/29 reacts with a group of membrane proteins ranging in molecular mass from 340 to 25 kD, as shown by immunoprecipitation of lysates of 125I-labeled sperm and Western blots. The most prominent reacting proteins are of molecular masses of 320, 240, 170, and 58 kD. The basis of the multiple reactivity appears to reside in the polypeptide chains of these proteins, as J18/29 binding is sensitive to protease digestion but resistant to periodate oxidation. There are approximately 570,000 sites per cell for J18/29 binding. J18/29 is the only reagent of known binding specificity that induces the AR; it identifies a subset of sperm membrane proteins whose individual characterization may lead to the isolation of the receptors involved in the triggering of the AR at fertilization.  相似文献   

8.
Sperm incorporation and the formation of the fertilization cone with its associated microvilli were investigated by scanning electron microscopy of eggs denuded of their vitelline layers with dithiothreitol or stripped of their elevating fertilization coats by physical methods. The activity of the elongating microvilli which appear to engulf the entering spermatozoon was recorded in living untreated eggs with time-lapse video microscopy. Following the acrosome reaction, the elongated acrosomal process connects the sperm head to the egg surface. About 15 microvilli adjacent to the attached sperm elongate at a rate of 2.6 μm/min and appear to engulf the sperm head, midpiece, and sperm tail. These elongate microvilli swell to form the fertilization cone (average height, 6.7 ± 2.0 μm) and are resorbed as the sperm tail enters the egg cytoplasm 10 min after insemination. Cytochalasin B, an inhibitor of microfilament motility, completely inhibits the observed egg plasma membrane surface activity in both control and denuded eggs. These results argue for a role of the microfilaments found in the egg cortex and microvilli as necessary for the engulfment of the sperm during incorporation and indicate that cytochalasin interferes with the fertilization process at this site.  相似文献   

9.
《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   

10.
The relationship between the plasma membrane potential and activation of sperm motility and respiration, or induction of the acrosome reaction, was explored in sperm of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. Plasma and mitochondrial membrane potentials were estimated by measuring the uptake of [14C]thiocyanate ( [14C]SCN-) and [3H]tetraphenylphosphonium ( [3H]TPP+) in intact sperm and sperm made permeant with digitonin. Mitochondrial potentials up to-185 mV were found, consistent with data for TPP+ uptake into mitochondria from other cell types. Values for TPP+ uptake corrected for mitochondrial accumulation and estimates of SCN- uptake both indicated that the plasma membrane potential was about -30 mV for actively respiring sperm in seawater and about -60 mV for quiescent sperm in Na+-free seawater. Activation of sperm motility and respiration induced by Na+ increased the intracellular pH and caused a depolarization of both the plasma membrane and mitochondrial potentials. However, membrane potential depolarization did not occur when the activation was induced by increased extracellular pH or by the peptide speract, although activation was always linked to increased intracellular pH. The acrosome reaction, on the other hand, was always associated with sperm plasma membrane potential depolarization, whether it was induced by the physiological effector from the egg surface or by several artificial triggering regimens. Thus, activation of respiration and motility is primarily controlled by increased intracellular pH (Christen, R., Schackmann, R. W., and Shapiro, B. M. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 14881-14890), whereas the acrosome reaction also requires depolarization of the plasma membrane potential.  相似文献   

11.
delta 9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and two other major cannabinoids derived from marihuana--cannabidiol (CBD) and cannabinol (CBN)--inhibit fertilization in the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus by reducing the fertilizing capacity of sperm (Schuel et al., 1987). Sperm fertility depends on their motility and on their ability to undergo the acrosome reaction upon encountering the egg's jelly coat. Pretreatment of S. purpuratus sperm with THC prevents triggering of the acrosome reaction by solubilized egg jelly in a dose (0.1-100 microM) and time (0-5 min)-dependent manner. Induction of the acrosome reaction is inhibited in 88.9 +/- 2.3% of sperm pretreated with 100 microM THC for 5 min, while motility of THC-treated sperm is not reduced compared to solvent (vehicle) and seawater-treated controls. The acrosome reaction is inhibited 50% by pretreatment with 6.6 microM THC for 5 min and with 100 microM THC after 20.8 sec. CBN and CBD at comparable concentrations inhibit the acrosome reaction by egg jelly in a manner similar to THC. THC does not inhibit the acrosome reaction artificially induced by ionomycin, which promotes Ca2+ influx, and nigericin, which promotes K+ efflux. THC partially inhibits (20-30%) the acrosome reaction induced by A23187, which promotes Ca2+ influx, and NH4OH, which raises the internal pH of the sperm. Addition of monensin, which promotes Na+ influx to egg jelly or to A23187, does not overcome the THC inhibition. Inhibition of the egg jelly-induced acrosome reaction by THC produces a corresponding reduction in the fertilizing capacity of the sperm. The adverse effects of THC on the acrosome reaction and sperm fertility are reversible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The sea urchin egg has thousands of secretory vesicles known as cortical granules. Upon fertilization, these vesicles undergo a Ca2+-dependent exocytosis. G-protein-linked mechanisms may take place during the egg activation. In somatic cells from mammals, GTP-binding proteins of the Rho family regulate a number of cellular processes, including organization of the actin cytoskeleton. We report here that a crude membrane fraction from homogenates of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sea urchin eggs, incubated with C3 (which ADP-ribosylates specifically Rho proteins) and [32P]NAD, displayed an [32P]ADP-ribosylated protein of 25 kDa that had the following characteristics: i) identical electrophoretic mobility in SDS-PAGE gels as the [32P]ADP-ribosylated Rho from sea urchin sperm; ii) identical mobility in isoelectro focusing gels as human RhoA; iii) positive cross-reactivity by immunoblotting with an antibody against mammalian RhoA. Thus, unfertilized S. purpuratus eggs contain a mammalian RhoA-like protein. Immunocytochemical analyses indicated that RhoA was localized preferentially to the cortical granules; this was confirmed by experiments of [32P]ADP-ribosylation with C3 in isolated cortical granules. Rho was secreted and retained in the fertilization membrane after insemination or activation with A23187. It was observed that the Rho protein present in the sea urchin sperm acrosome was also secreted during the exocytotic acrosome reaction. Thus, Rho could participate in those processes related to the cortical granules, i.e., in the Ca2+-regulated exocytosis or actin reorganization that accompany the egg activation.  相似文献   

13.
Sperm-oocyte membrane fusion has been observed during monospermic fertilization of a human oocyte in vitro. Women were stimulated with both clomiphene citrate and human menopausal gonadotropin and were given human chorionic gonadotropin before a LH-surge. Twelve oocytes, collected at laparoscopy from six women who became pregnant by IVF, were allowed to mature for 7–14 hours in vitro and inseminated with preincubated sperm, fixed between 1–3 hours after insemination, and examined by transmission electron microscopy. Membrane fusion had occurred in one ovum 2 hours after insemination, and the oocyte had resumed maturation and was at anaphase II of meiosis. Cortical granules had been exocytosed, and some of their contents were visible at the surface close to the oolemma all around the oocyte. The sperm that fused with this oocyte was acrosome-reacted and had been partly incorporated into the ooplasm, while the anterior two-thirds of its head was phagocytosed by a tongue of cortical ooplasm. Membrane fusion had occurred between the oolemma and the plasma membrane overlying the postacrosomal segment of the sperm head, posterior to the equatorial vestige. Sperm chromatin had not decondensed, and serial sections revealed a midpiece attached to the basal plate and a tail located deeper in the ooplasm, all devoid of plasma membrane. Supplementary sperm penetrating the inner zona, approaching the perivitelline space, had undergone the acrosome reaction but had a persistent vestige of the equatorial segment of the acrosome with intact plasma membrane. Evidence of sperm chromatin decondensation was seen in other oocytes, 3 hours after insemination, which were at telophase II of meiosis. Eight oocytes penetrated by sperm were monospermic, while four were unfertilized. The general pattern of sperm fusion and incorporation appears to conform to that seen in most other mammals. The study also reveals that sperm have to complete the acrosome reaction before fusing with the egg.  相似文献   

14.
To analyze sperm surface molecules involved in sperm–egg envelope binding in Xenopus laevis, heat‐solubilized vitelline envelope (VE) dot blotted onto a polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) sheet was incubated with a detergent extract of sperm plasma membrane (SP‐ML). The membrane components bound to the VE were detected using an antibody library against sperm plasma membrane components, and a hybridoma clone producing a monoclonal antibody (mAb) 16A2A7 was identified. This mAb was used in a Far Western blotting experiment in which VE was separated by electrophoresis, and then transferred to a PVDF strip that was incubated with SP‐ML. It was found that SP‐ML binds to the VE component gp37 (Xenopus homolog of mammalian ZP1). The antigens reactive to mAb 16A2A7 showed apparent molecular weights of 65–130 and 20–30 kDa, and were distributed relatively evenly over the entire sperm surface. Periodate oxidation revealed that both the pertinent epitope on the sperm surface and the ligands of VE gp37 were sugar moieties. VE gp37 was exposed on the VE surface, and the mAb 16A2A7 dose‐dependently inhibited sperm binding to VE. The sperm membrane molecules reactive with mAb 16A2A7 also reacted with mAb 2A3D9, which is known to recognize the glycoprotein SGP in the sperm plasma membrane and is involved in interactions with the egg plasma membrane, indicating that the sperm membrane glycoprotein has a bifunctional role in Xenopus fertilization. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 77: 728–735, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Fine structural changes in the egg and sperm are described during gamete interaction in Oikopleura dioica, an appendicularian tunicate. The unfertilized egg has a vitelline layer 80 nm thick and a perivitelline space about 5 m wide. In the peripheral cytoplasm are a few cortical granules 0.6×0.7 m in diameter and areas rich in parallel cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum alternating with areas rich in long mitochondria. In the deeper cytoplasm the predominant organelles are multivesicular bodies. From 25 s to 60 s after insemination, the egg transiently elongates, although with no obvious cytoplasmic rearrangement, and the egg surface becomes bumpy. During this interval sperm enter the egg, and the cortical granules undergo exocytosis. After expulsion into the perivitelline space, the cortical granule contents do not appear to change their shape or blend with the vitelline layer, which neither elevates further nor loses its ability to bind sperm. On encountering the egg, the sperm undergoes an acrosome reaction involving exocytosis of the acrosome and production of an acrosomal tubule. The acrosomal contents bind the sperm to the vitelline layer, and the posterior portion of the acrosomal membrane and the anterior portion of the nuclear envelope evaginate together to form an acrosomal tubule, which fuses with the egg plasma membrane to form a fertilization cone. By 45 s after insemination, the sperm nucleus, centriole, mitochondrion and at least the anterior portion of the axoneme are within the fertilization cone. By 60 s sperm entry is complete. In having eggs with a cortical reaction and sperm with an acrosome reaction, O. dioica resembles echinoderms and enteropneusts and differs markedly from ascidian tunicates, which lack both these features. The relatively unmodified pattern of gamete interaction in O. dioica in comparison with the highly modified pattern in ascidians is difficult to reconcile with the neoteny theory that appendicularians have evolved via ascidian ancestors. The present results are more consistent with the idea that an appendicularian-like ancestor gave rise to ascidians.  相似文献   

16.
The binding of mammalian spermatozoa to the egg's extracellular coat, the zona pellucida, is a complex process which culminates in species-specific penetration of the sperm to the egg plasma membrane. To investigate where on the spermatozoon's surface the zona binding sites are located, whole rabbit zonae were labeled with FITC, heat solubilized and used to observe the surface binding patterns on live spermatozoa. Before the acrosome reaction the zona binding sites are located either over the entire head as well as the middle piece or alternatively in patches along the apical ridge of the head. After the acrosome reaction there is a 29% loss of fluorescence and the zona binding sites are present in the posterior aspect of the acrosomal region, the anterior postacrosomal region and the middle piece. These results demonstrate the presence of zona binding sites after the acrosome reaction which would account for the sperm's ability to remain bound to the zona after the acrosome reaction. Further, we report for the first time that solubilized rabbit zonae pellucidae will induce the acrosome reaction in in vitro capacitated rabbit sperm whereas solubilized pig zonae pellucidae will not. Since rabbit sperm bind pig zonae, the induction and specificity of the physiological acrosome reaction must reside in the affinity of the binding rather than the binding itself.  相似文献   

17.
To investigate the molecular basis of gamete interaction in mammals, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have been generated by syngeneic immunization with mouse testis. Previous work has described two particular mAbs, M41 and M42, which localize indistinguishably to the plasma membrane overlying a restricted portion of the acrosome, but recognize different antigens. One of the mAbs, M42, inhibits mouse fertilization in vitro significantly, but only in the presence of the zona pellucida, whereas M41 has no apparent effect upon any assayable event in the fertilization process. The experiments described here were performed to identify the precise event of sperm-zona interaction (sperm-zona binding, induction of the acrosome reaction, or penetration through the zona) that is affected by M42 mAb. Capacitated mouse sperm binding to the zona pellucida was undiminished following pretreatment with M42 mAb, when compared to levels achieved using either no mAb- or to M41 mAb-treated control sperm. When the effect of mAbs on the zona-induced AR was examined, the percentage of acrosome reacted (AR) sperm at the zona surface increased with time, plateauing at approximately 90 min post-insemination, with 78% of the bound cells AR in the control and the M41 mAb-treated groups. M42-treated sperm never achieved greater than 23% AR cells over the 120-min interval assayed. To quantitate this effect, capacitated sperm were exposed to increasing concentrations of acid-solubilized zonae. Increased proportions of AR sperm were found in the control and M41 mAb-treated groups, up to a maximum of 70-76% AR cells with 8 or 12 zonae/microliter. In contrast, M42-treated sperm displayed only 21-28% AR cells over the entire range of zonae concentrations tested. An entirely different result emerged when acrosome reactions were induced with A23187: M42 was no longer able to prevent the AR. This ability of A23187 to override M42 mAb's inhibitory effect on the AR permitted specific examination of the possible effect of M42 mAb on sperm penetration through the zona pellucida. In the presence of A23187, zona penetration levels for M42 mAb-treated sperm were equivalent, both qualitatively and quantitatively, to control and to M41 mAb-treated sperm under the same conditions. It appears, therefore, that M42 mAb identifies a high molecular weight doublet (220-240 kDa) of mouse sperm that participates specifically in the induction of the sperm's acrosome reaction as it occurs under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Membrane fusion events are required in three steps in sea urchin fertilization: the acrosome reaction in sperm, fusion of the plasma membrane of acrosome-reacted sperm with the plasma membrane of the egg, and exocytosis of the contents of the egg cortical granules. We recently reported the involvement of a Zn2+-dependent metalloendoprotease in the acrosome reaction (Farach, H. C., D. I. Mundy, W. J. Strittmatter, and W. J. Lennarz. 1987. J. Biol. Chem. 262:5483-5487). In the current study, we investigated the possible involvement of metalloendoproteases in the two other fusion events of fertilization. The use of inhibitors of metalloendoproteases provided evidence that at least one of the fusion events subsequent to the acrosome reaction requires such enzymes. These inhibitors did not block the binding of sperm to egg or the process of cortical granule exocytosis. However, sperm-egg fusion, assayed by the ability of the bound sperm to establish cytoplasmic continuity with the egg, was inhibited by metalloendoprotease substrate. Thus, in addition to the acrosome reaction, an event in the gamete fusion process requires a metalloendoprotease.  相似文献   

19.
Evidence has been presented that the PH-20 protein functions in sperm adhesion to the egg zona pellucida (Primakoff, P., H. Hyatt, and D. G. Myles, 1985, J. Cell Biol., 101:2239-2244). The PH-20 protein migrates from its original surface domain to a new surface domain after the acrosome reaction (Myles, D. G., and P. Primakoff, 1984, J. Cell Biol., 99:1634-1641). The acrosome reaction is an exocytotic event that results in insertion of a region of the secretory granule membrane, the inner acrosomal membrane (IAM), into the plasma membrane. After the acrosome reaction, PH-20 protein migrates to the IAM from its initial domain on the posterior head surface. We have now found a new dynamic feature of the regulation of PH-20 protein on the sperm surface; exocytosis increases the surface expression of PH-20 protein. After the acrosome reaction there is an approximately threefold increase in the number of PH-20 antigenic sites on the sperm surface. These new antigenic sites are revealed on the surface by insertion of the IAM into the plasma membrane. Our evidence indicates that before the acrosome reaction an intracellular population of PH-20 antigen is localized to the IAM. When migration of the surface population of the PH-20 protein is prevented, PH-20 protein can still be detected on the IAM of acrosome-reacted sperm. Also, PH-20 protein can be detected on the IAM of permeabilized acrosome-intact sperm by indirect immunofluorescence. Thus, the sperm cell regulates the amount of PH-20 protein on its surface by sequestering about two-thirds of the protein on an intracellular membrane and subsequently exposing this population on the cell surface by an exocytotic event. This may be a general mechanism for regulating cell surface composition where a rapid increase in the amount of a cell surface protein is required.  相似文献   

20.
The ultrastructure of sperm changes and penetration in the egg was studied in the anuran Discoglossus pictus, whose sperm have an acrosome cap with a typical tip, the apical rod. The first stage of the sperm apical rod and acrosome reaction (AR) consists in vesiculation between the plasma membrane and the outer acrosome membrane. The two components of the acrosome cap are released in sequence. The innermost component (component B) is dispersed first. The next acrosome change is the dispersal of the outermost acrosome content (component A). At 30 sec postinsemination, when the loss of component B is first observed, holes are seen in the innermost jelly coat (J1), surrounding the penetrating sperm. Therefore, this acrosome constituent might be related to penetration through the innermost egg investments. At 1 min postinsemination, during sperm penetration into the egg, a halo of finely granular material is observed around the inner acrosome membrane of the spermatozoon, suggesting a role for component A at this stage of penetration. Gamete-binding and fusion take place between D1 (the egg-specific site for sperm interaction) and the perpendicularly oriented sperm. Spermatozoa visualized at their initial interaction (15 sec postinsemination) with the oolemma are undergoing vesiculation. The first interaction is likely to occur between the D1 glycocalyx and the plasma membrane of the hybrid vesicles surrounding the apical rod. As fusion is observed between the internal acrosome membrane and the oolemma, it can be postulated that gametic interaction might be followed by fusion of the latter with the apical rod internal membrane that extends posteriorly into the inner acrosome membrane. Insemination of the outermost jelly layer (J3) dissected out of the egg, and observations of the ultrastructural changes of spermatozoa in this coat, indicate that J3 rather than the vitelline coat (VC) induces the AR. Interestingly, at the late postinsemination stage, VC fibrils are seen crosslinking the inner acrosome membrane. The role of this binding is here discussed. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 47:323–333, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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