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1.
The sequence of ultrastructural events following the onset of the sperm-induced conductance increase in eggs of the sea urchin, Lytechinus variegatus, was investigated. Eggs voltage clamped at -20 mV were fixed 1 to 20 sec after onset of the conductance increase caused by single sperm. Continuity between the plasma membranes of the sperm and egg was first detected 5 sec after onset of the conductance increase. The earliest stages of formation of the fertilization cone coincided with the establishment of continuity of the gamete plasma membranes. At 6 to 8 sec after the initial conductance increase cortical granule dehiscence was first observed in the immediate vicinity where continuity of the gamete plasma membranes had occurred. These observations are consistent with the conclusion that opening of ion channels at fertilization precedes fusion of the sperm and egg plasma membranes, while exocytosis of cortical granules is initiated following fusion of the sperm and egg plasma membranes.  相似文献   

2.
We have shown that sperm sulfolipidimmobilizing protein 1 (SLIP1, molecular mass of 68 kDa), a sulfogalactosylglycerolipid (SGG)-binding protein, is significant in sperm-zona pellucida (ZP) interaction. The objective of this study was to localize SLIP1 on the egg and determine its role in gamete interaction. Immunofluorescence and immunoprotein A gold electron microscopy localized SLIP1 to the egg plasma membrane. In vitro gamete binding, using zona-free eggs preincubated with antiSLIP1 Fab before coincubation with sperm, showed a significant, dose-dependent decrease in sperm-egg plasma membrane binding. Similar results were obtained when affinity-purified antiSLIP1 IgG was used for egg pretreatment. The significance of egg SLIP1 in sperm-egg plasma membrane binding was further demonstrated by a decrease (36-52%) in in vitro fertilization when zona-intact eggs were pretreated with antiSLIP1 IgG. Since SLIP1 has been shown to bind SGG in vitro, we investigated the possibility that sperm SGG may participate in sperm-egg plasma membrane binding through egg SLIP1. Pretreatment of sperm with antiSGG Fab prior to coincubation with zona-free eggs resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in sperm-egg plasma membrane binding. Collectively, these findings strongly suggest a role for egg SLIP1 in sperm-egg plasma membrane interaction, which may be through its binding to sperm SGG.  相似文献   

3.
Epididymal protein CRISP1 participates in rat and mouse gamete fusion through its interaction with complementary sites on the egg surface. Based on in vivo observations, in the present study we investigated the possibility that CRISP1 plays an additional role in the sperm-zona pellucida (ZP) interaction that precedes gamete fusion. In vitro fertilization experiments using zona-intact rat and mouse eggs indicated that the presence of either an antibody against rat CRISP1 (anti-CRISP1) or rat native CRISP1 (rCRISP1) during gamete co-incubation produced a significant decrease in the percentage of fertilized eggs. However, differently to that expected for a protein involved in gamete fusion, no accumulation of perivitelline sperm was observed, suggesting that the inhibitions occurred at the sperm-ZP interaction level. Bacterially expressed recombinant CRISP1 (recCRISP1) also significantly inhibited egg fertilization. In this case, however, an increase in the number of perivitelline sperm was observed. Subsequent experiments evaluating the effect of anti-CRISP1 or rCRISP1 on the number of sperm bound per egg indicated that the protein is involved in the initial step of sperm-ZP binding. In agreement with these functional studies, indirect immunofluorescence experiments revealed that although rCRISP1 is capable of binding to both the ZP and the oolema, recCRISP1 only binds to the egg surface. The finding that deglycosylated rCRISP1 behaves as the untreated protein, whereas the heat-denatured rCRISP1 associated only with the oolema, indicates that the protein ZP-binding ability resides in the conformation rather than in the glycosydic portion of the molecule. The interaction between rCRISP1 and the ZP reproduces the sperm-ZP-binding behavior, as judged by the failure of the protein to interact with the ZP of fertilized eggs. Together, these results support the idea that CRISP1 participates not only in sperm-egg fusion but also in the prior stage of sperm-ZP interaction.  相似文献   

4.
Rat epididymal protein DE associates with the sperm surface during epididymal maturation and is a candidate molecule for mediating gamete membrane fusion in the rat. Here, we provide evidence supporting a role for DE in mouse sperm-egg fusion. Western blot studies indicated that the antibody against rat protein DE can recognize the mouse homologue in both epididymal tissue and sperm extracts. Indirect immunofluorescence studies using this antibody localized the protein on the dorsal region of the acrosome. Experiments in which zona-free mouse eggs were coincubated with mouse capacitated sperm in the presence of DE showed a significant and concentration-dependent inhibition in the percentage of penetrated eggs, with no effect on either the percentage of oocytes with bound sperm or the number of sperm bound per egg. Immunofluorescence experiments revealed specific DE-binding sites on the fusogenic region of mouse eggs. Because mouse sperm can penetrate zona-free rat eggs, the participation of DE in this interaction was also investigated. The presence of the protein during gamete coincubation produced a significant reduction in the percentage of penetrated eggs, without affecting the binding of sperm to the oolemma. These observations support the involvement of DE in an event subsequent to sperm-egg binding and leading to fusion in both homologous (mouse-mouse) and heterologous (mouse-rat) sperm-egg interaction. The lack of disintegrin domains in DE indicates that the protein interacts with its egg-binding sites through a novel mechanism that does not involve the reported disintegrin-integrin interaction.  相似文献   

5.
Sea urchin egg fertilization requires the species-specific interaction of molecules on the sperm and egg surfaces. Previously, we isolated an extracellular, 70-kD glycosylated fragment of the S. purpuratus egg receptor for sperm by treating the eggs with lysylendoproteinase C (Foltz, K. R., and W. J. Lennarz. 1990. J. Cell Biol. 111:2951-2959). To characterize the receptor further, we have generated a polyclonal antiserum (anti-70KL) against the purified 70-kD fragment. Anti-70KL was found to react with a single polypeptide of approximately 350 kD on Western blots, presumed to be the intact receptor, in an egg cell surface preparation. This polypeptide appeared to be tightly associated with the plasma membrane/vitelline layer complex, as it was released from these preparations only by detergent treatment. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that the receptor was distributed evenly over the egg surface. The anti-70KL was species specific both in its ability to recognize the egg surface protein and to inhibit sperm binding. Fab fragments generated from affinity-purified anti-70KL also bound to the egg surface and inhibited sperm binding in a concentration-dependent manner. Interestingly, treatment with Fabs caused a small percentage of eggs to undergo cortical granule exocytosis, even in the absence of external Ca2+. These results confirm earlier findings indicating that the receptor is a cell surface glycoprotein of high molecular weight that species specifically binds sperm. This antiserum provides a powerful tool for further investigation of gamete interactions and the structure of the sperm receptor.  相似文献   

6.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2951-2959
Fertilization in the sea urchin involves species-specific interaction between the ligand bindin on the surface of acrosome-reacted sperm and a receptor of high molecular weight on the surface of the egg. Efforts to understand this interaction and the resultant signal transduction events leading to egg activation have been limited because of the large size and extreme insolubility of the intact receptor on the egg surface. Earlier work suggested that an alternative strategy would be to isolate proteolytic fragments of the extracellular domain of this receptor. Consequently, we have treated S. purpuratus eggs with a specific protease, lysylendoproteinase C. This enzyme treatment abolished the ability of eggs to bind sperm and resulted in the release of proteolytic fragments that bound to sperm and showed inhibitory activity in a fertilization bioassay. One of these fragments, presumed to be a fragment of the extracellular domain of the receptor, was purified to homogeneity by gel filtration and anion exchange chromatography and shown to be a 70-kD glycosylated protein. Several lines of evidence support the contention that this fragment is derived from the receptor. First, the fragment inhibited fertilization species specifically. Second, species specific binding of the 70-kD glycoprotein to acrosome-reacted sperm was directly demonstrated by using 125I-labeled receptor fragment. Third, the fragment exhibited the same species specificity in binding to isolated bindin particles. Species specificity was abolished by Pronase digestion of the fragment. This observation supports the hypothesis that although binding is mediated by the carbohydrate moieties, species specificity is dependent on the polypeptide backbone. The availability of a structurally defined fragment of the receptor will facilitate further studies of the molecular basis of gamete interaction.  相似文献   

7.
Lectin-like molecules on the sperm surface are implicated in the process of gamete recognition and adhesion. We have isolated and biochemically characterized a 15 kDa glycoprotein from ejaculated boar sperm which possess zona pellucida-binding- and haemagglutinating-activity. The zona/15 kDa protein interaction is inhibited by fucoidan, suggesting that the glycoprotein is one of the sperm components which participate in the initial gamete interaction. N-Terminal sequence analysis of the isolated 15 kDa glycoprotein showed that it may belong to the same sperm/egg recognition-mediating protein family as the sea urchin sperm protein binding.  相似文献   

8.
When unfertilized sea urchin eggs are pretreated with the bisbenzimide DNA-specific fluorochrome Hoechst 33342, then washed and fertilized, a single sperm bound to the egg surface becomes intensely fluorescent. The location of the fluorescent sperm on the egg surface coincides exactly with the epicenter of the cortical reaction and the site at which the insemination cone subsequently appears. These observations, coupled with studies of eggs treated with quercetin to prevent fusion, as well as eggs made polyspermic by halothane exposure, indicate that the sperm acquires fluorescence as a consequence of fusion with the fluorochrome preloaded egg. Using a modification of this technique, we have found that cytoplasmic continuity between the sperm and egg is established at 4-8 sec after the onset of the sperm-induced conductance increase in the egg.  相似文献   

9.
Gamete membrane interaction is critical to initiate the development of a new organism. The signaling pathways governing this event, however, are poorly understood. In this report, we provide the first evidence that protein kinase C activity in mouse eggs plays a crucial role in the regulation of this process. Stimulating PKC activity in mouse eggs by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) drastically inhibited the egg's membrane ability to bind and fuse with sperm. Surprisingly, this significant reduction of gamete membrane interaction was also observed in eggs treated with the PKC inhibitors staurosporine and calphostin c. In further analysis, we found that while no change of egg actin cytoskeleton was detected after either PMA or calphostin c treatment, the structural morphology of egg surface microvilli was severely altered in the PMA-treated eggs, but not in the calphostin c-treated eggs. Moreover, sperm, which bound but did not fuse with the eggs treated with the anti-CD9 antibody KMC8, were liberated from the egg membrane after PMA, but not calphostin c, treatment. Taken together, these results suggest that egg PKC may be precisely balanced to regulate gamete membrane interaction in a biphasic mode, and this biphasic regulation is executed through two different mechanisms.  相似文献   

10.
Evidence for sperm-borne proteolytic enzymes exposed during the acrosome reaction in sea urchin sperm has been accumulating. To investigate the possible role(s) such enzymes have in fertilization, we studied the effects of several protease inhibitors on sperm-related events. Soybean trypsin inhibitor, Nα-p-tosyl-l-lysine, chloromethyl ketone, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and chymostatin neither reduced the number of acrosome reactions nor interfered with gamete binding. p-Nitrophenyl-p′-guanidinobenzoate caused sperm to fuse into irregular clumps, rendering them unable to fertilize eggs. However, l-1-tosylamide-2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone (TPCK), an inhibitor of chymotrypsin, prevented the acrosome reaction in Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, S. droebachiensis, and Lytechinus pictus. The effects of TPCK on sperm in subsequent steps of fertilization were also investigated. First, gamete binding assays were performed on fixed eggs. This precluded any effects TPCK might have had on egg-derived secretions (e.g., proteases). Binding of prereacted sperm occurred with both fixed and living eggs. However, fertilization of living eggs in the presence of TPCK was greatly reduced, even though sperm had been prereacted with egg jelly. Vitelline coats were then removed from eggs by trypsin treatment. Eggs in TPCK fertilized and developed normally after the above treatment. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis of a sperm protease participating in the acrosome reaction and the penetration of the egg vitelline coat in the sea urchin.  相似文献   

11.
CRISP2, originally known as Tpx-1, is a cysteine-rich secretory protein specifically expressed in male haploid germ cells. Although likely to be involved in gamete interaction, evidence for a functional role of CRISP2 in fertilization still remains poor. In the present study, we used a mouse model to examine the subcellular localization of CRISP2 in sperm and its involvement in the different stages of fertilization. Results from indirect immunofluorescence and protein extraction experiments indicated that mouse CRISP2 is an intraacrosomal component that remains associated with sperm after capacitation and the acrosome reaction (AR). In vitro fertilization assays using zona pellucida-intact mouse eggs showed that an antibody against the protein significantly decreased the percentage of penetrated eggs, with a coincident accumulation of perivitelline sperm. The failure to inhibit zona pellucida penetration excludes a detrimental effect of the antibody on sperm motility or the AR, supporting a specific participation of CRISP2 at the sperm-egg fusion step. In agreement with this evidence, recombinant mouse CRISP2 (recCRISP2) specifically bound to the fusogenic area of mouse eggs, as previously reported for rat CRISP1, an epididymal protein involved in gamete fusion. In vitro competition investigations showed that incubation of mouse zona-free eggs with a fixed concentration of recCRISP2 and increasing amounts of rat CRISP1 reduced the binding of recCRISP2 to the egg, suggesting that the proteins interact with common complementary sites on the egg surface. Our findings indicate that testicular CRISP2, as observed for epididymal CRISP1, is involved in sperm-egg fusion through its binding to complementary sites on the egg surface, supporting the idea of functional cooperation between homologous molecules to ensure the success of fertilization.  相似文献   

12.
Jaspisin, originally isolated from a marine sponge as an inhibitor of the hatching of the sea urchin (Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus) embryo, causes inhibition of sea urchin fertilization. Electron microscopic examination revealed that the acrosome reaction was induced in jaspisin-treated sperm when they were incubated with an intact egg. The acrosome-reacted sperm bound to the vitelline layer by the acrosomal material surrounding the acrosomal process. However, fusion of the acrosomal process and the egg plasma membrane failed to take place. Membrane potential changes were monitored using eggs preloaded with a membrane potential-sensitive fluorochrome, di-8-ANEPPS. Depolarization of the membrane potential, normally observed in the fertilized egg was not observed in the egg inseminated in the presence of jaspisin, indicating the absence of electrical continuity between the jaspisin-treated egg and sperm. Jaspisin inhibited the activities of matrix metallo-endoproteinase members but not of other types of proteinases. These results provide strong, albeit indirect, evidence that a matrix metallo-endoproteinase(s) is involved in the process of gamete fusion during sea urchin fertilization.  相似文献   

13.
Complementary adhesion molecules are located on the surface of mouse eggs and sperm. These molecules support species-specific interactions between sperm and eggs that lead to gamete fusion (fertilization). Modification of these molecules shortly after gamete fusion assists in prevention of polyspermic fertilization. mZP3, an 83,000-Mr glycoprotein located in the egg extracellular coat, or zona pellucida, serves as primary sperm receptor. Gamete adhesion in mice is carbohydrate-mediated, since sperm recognize and bind to certain mZP3 serine/threonine- (O-) linked oligosaccharides. As a consequence of binding to mZP3, sperm undergo the acrosome reaction, which enables them to penetrate the zona pellucida and fertilize the egg. A 56,000-Mr protein called sp56, which is located in plasma membrane surrounding acrosome-intact mouse sperm heads, is a putative primary egg-binding protein. It is suggested that sp56 recognizes and binds to certain mZP3 O-linked oligosaccharides. Acrosome-reacted sperm remain bound to eggs by interacting with mZP2, a 120,000-Mr zona pellicida glycoprotein. Thus, mZP2 serves as secondary sperm receptor. Perhaps a sperm protease associated with inner acrosomal membrane, possibly (pro)acrosin, serves as secondary egg-binding protein. These and, perhaps, other egg and sperm surface molecules regulate fertilization in mice. Homologous molecules apparently regulate fertilization in other mammals.  相似文献   

14.
Hamster epididymal spermatozoa were washed and preincubated at extremely low sperm concentrations (100/ml or less) in a culture medium containing naturally-occurring sperm motility-stimulating substances. These substances were partially purified "sperm motility factor" (SMF) derived from hamster adrenal glands and catecholamines (epinephrine or isoproterenol). After preincubation for three hours, a small number (5 or less) of washed, cumulus-free hamster eggs was added to each sperm suspension. Many of these eggs were undergoing fertilization when examined two to three hours later. Fertilization was accomplished in vitro at sperm:egg ratios approaching 1:1, a situation comparable to that believed to exist in vivo. It appears that this demonstration will considerably enhance the potential of in vitro fertilization studies for providing useful information on mammalian gamete interactions.  相似文献   

15.
When unfertilized echinoderm eggs are treated with the DNA-specific bisbenzimide fluorochrome Hoechst 33342 and then fertilized with unlabeled sperm, a single spermatozoan bound to the egg surface becomes fluorescent. Several lines of evidence, including correlative scanning electron microscopic studies, indicate that the fluorescent sperm is, in fact, the fertilizing sperm which acquires fluorescence as a consequence of membrane fusion between the sperm and egg. Comparative studies show that several fluorochromes structurally related to H33342 can be used to selectively identify the fertilizing sperm at the egg surface and that H33258 possesses a distinct advantage when used to visualize the male and female pronuclei in eggs fixed prior to fluorochrome exposure. Finally, none of the fluorochromes tested in these studies have any discernible effect on development from the first cell division through the pluteus larva stage. These observations suggest that the fluorochrome-transfer technique for identifying the fertilizing sperm may be useful in a wide variety of studies of gamete interaction as a simple and rapid cytological indicator for sperm-egg fusion.  相似文献   

16.
The role of cell surface glycoproteins of the sea urchin egg in binding sperm has been examined by studying the biological activity of glycopeptides derived from these glycoproteins. Glycopeptides were produced from egg surface glycoproteins by Pronase digestion. After fractionation by gel filtration the glycopeptides were tested for their ability to inhibit the binding of sperm to eggs, presumably by competing with the egg surface glycoproteins for binding sites on the sperm. One glycopeptide fraction with an apparent molecular weight of approximately 6,000 was found to be a potent inhibitor of sperm-egg binding, as well as fertilization, even at nanomolar concentrations. This activity was heat stable and exerted its effect against the sperm and not the egg. Experiments with a radiolabeled form of the glycopeptide fraction directly demonstrated that at least one component of it bound to sperm. Specific binding of the radiolabeled glycopeptide occurred only to acrosome-reacted sperm. Because the isolated glycopeptide fraction has many of the characteristics that one would expect of a biologically active fragment of an egg surface receptor for sperm, these findings are consistent with the idea that one or more glycoconjugates on the surface of the egg are involved in sperm binding.  相似文献   

17.
The interactions between sea urchin spermatozoa and ova duringfertilization usually exhibit a high degree of species specificity.Under natural conditions and reasonable gamete concentrations,most interspecific inseminations fail to yield zygotes. Macromoleculeson the external surfaces of the apposing gametes must surelybe responsible for successful gamete recognition, adhesion andfusion. Species specific recognition between surface componentsof sperm and egg could occur during at least three events comprisingthe fertilization process. The first event is the interactionof the sperm plasma membrane with the egg jelly coat. This inducesthe sperm acrosome reaction resulting in the exocytosis of the"bindin" -containing acrosome granule and also the extrusionof the acrosome process from the anterior tip of the sperm.The second event is the adhesion of the bindin-coated acrosomeprocess to glycoprotein "bindin receptors" on the external surfaceof the egg vitelline layer. The third event is the penetrationof the vitelline layer and the fusion of sperm and egg plasmamembranes. With the isolations of the component of egg jellywhich induces the acrosome reaction, sperm bindin from the acrosomevesicle and the egg surface bindin receptor from the vitellinelayer, there is hope of discovering the molecular basis of thismost interesting intercellular interaction which results inthe activation of embryonic development.  相似文献   

18.
When immotile, flagella-less sperm were added to acid-dejellied eggs of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus 11% of the eggs fertilized. Addition of soluble egg jelly increased the percentage fertilization to 90.5. Over 50% of the sperm exposed to egg jelly had undergone the acrosome reaction compared to only 3–5% in the absence of jelly. Egg jelly was added to flagella-less sperm to induce the acrosome reaction and dejellied eggs added at various times thereafter. The fertilizing capacity of the sperm decreased with first order kinetics with 50% loss by 23 sec after induction of the acrosome reaction. Intact, motile sperm bind to formaldehyde-fixed eggs with maximum binding occurring 40 sec after sperm addition. After 40 sec the sperm begin to detach from the fixed eggs and by 240 sec none remain attached. Sperm detachment from fixed eggs and loss of fertilizing capacity after the acrosome reaction show a close temporal correlation.  相似文献   

19.
In clinical studies of the ability of capacitated human sperm to penetrate zona-free hamster eggs, we have previously observed that the ratio of oolemmal adherent to penetrating sperm varied between men. Sperm incorporation did not occur immediately following gamete adhesion and not all adherent sperm penetrated the egg. To further investigate this phenomenon, comparisons were made of the kinetics of gamete adhesion, membrane fusion, and sperm incorporation of capacitated mouse and human spermatozoa by zona-free hamster eggs and of mouse sperm by zona-free mouse and hamster eggs. Eggs were inseminated with either capacitated human or mouse sperm or combinations of both, washed out of sperm suspension after initial gamete adherence, and further incubated in sperm-free medium. Gamete membrane fusion was judged by dye transfer of Hoechst 33342 and sperm entry of the cortical ooplasm by observation of expanded sperm heads within acridine orange stained eggs. Oolemmal adherent mouse and human sperm fused with and penetrated zona-free hamster eggs at different times whether eggs were inseminated in parallel or with combinations of sperm of both species. Oolemmal adherent mouse sperm penetrated zona-free hamster eggs prior to their penetration of zona-free mouse eggs. Ultrastructural studies of zona-free human eggs inseminated with human sperm confirmed prior observations with hamster eggs that only acrosome-reacted human sperm adhere to the oolemma. These results have lead us to postulate that sperm entry into the egg may occur through a "zipper" mechanism involving the ligation of local gamete receptors similar to the incorporation of target particles by phagocytes and suggest that not all oolemmal adherent human sperm are capable of being incorporated although they have undergone an acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

20.
Sperm limitation may be an important selective force influencing gamete traits such as egg size. The relatively inexpensive extracellular structures surrounding many marine invertebrate eggs might serve to enhance collision rates without the added cost of increasing the egg cell. However, despite decades of research, the effects of extracellular structures on fertilization have not been conclusively documented. Here, using the sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus, we remove jelly coats from eggs, and we quantify sperm collisions to eggs with jelly coats, eggs without jelly coats, and inert plastic beads. We also quantify fertilization success in both egg treatment groups. We find that sperm-egg collision rates increase as a function of sperm concentration and target size and that sperm are not chemotactically attracted to eggs nor to jelly coats in this species. In fertilization assays, the presence of the jelly coat is correlated with a significant but smaller-than-expected improvement in fertilization success. A pair of optimality models predict that, despite the large difference in the energetic value of egg contents and jelly material, the presence of the jelly coat does not diminish selection for larger egg cell size when sperm are limiting.  相似文献   

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