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A K+-selective cGMP-gated ion channel controls chemosensation of sperm
Authors:Strünker Timo  Weyand Ingo  Bönigk Wolfgang  Van Qui  Loogen Astrid  Brown Joel E  Kashikar Nachiket  Hagen Volker  Krause Eberhard  Kaupp U Benjamin
Affiliation:Institut für Neurowissenschaft und Biophysik, Abteilung Zellul?re Signalverarbeitung, INB-1, Forschungszentrum Jülich, 52425 Jülich, Germany.
Abstract:
Eggs attract sperm by chemical factors, a process called chemotaxis. Sperm from marine invertebrates use cGMP signalling to transduce incident chemoattractants into changes in the Ca2+ concentration in the flagellum, which control the swimming behaviour during chemotaxis. The signalling pathway downstream of the synthesis of cGMP by a guanylyl cyclase is ill-defined. In particular, the ion channels that are involved in Ca2+ influx and their mechanisms of gating are not known. Using rapid voltage-sensitive dyes and kinetic techniques, we record the voltage response that is evoked by the chemoattractant in sperm from the sea urchin Arbacia punctulata. We show that the chemoattractant evokes a brief hyperpolarization followed by a sustained depolarization. The hyperpolarization is caused by the opening of K+-selective cyclic-nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels in the flagellum. Ca2+ influx commences at the onset of recovery from hyperpolarization. The voltage threshold of Ca2+ entry indicates the involvement of low-voltage-activated Ca(v) channels. These results establish a model of chemosensory transduction in sperm whereby a cGMP-induced hyperpolarization opens Ca(v) channels by a 'recovery-from-inactivation' mechanism and unveil an evolutionary kinship between transduction mechanisms in sperm and photoreceptors.
Keywords:
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