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1.
To fertilize the oocyte, mammalian spermatozoa must undergo capacitation and acrosome reaction. These events are believed to be associated with various biochemical changes primarily mediated by cAMP, Ca2+ and protein kinases. But the precise signaling mechanisms governing sperm function are not clear. To study this, we used pentoxifylline (PF), a sperm motility stimulant and a cAMP-phosphodiesterase inhibitor, during capacitation and acrosome reaction of hamster spermatozoa. PF induced an early onset of sperm capacitation and its action involved modulation of sperm cell signaling molecules viz, cAMP, [Ca2+]i and protein kinases. The PF-induced capacitation was associated with an early and increased total protein phosphorylation coupled with changes in the levels of reactive oxygen species. Protein kinase (PK)-A inhibitor (H-89) completely inhibited phosphorylation of a 29 kDa protein while PK-C inhibitor (staurosporine) did not inhibit phosphorylation. Interestingly, PF induced protein tyrosine phosphorylation of a set of proteins (Mr 45-80 K) and a greater proportion of PF-treated spermatozoa exhibited protein tyrosine phosphorylation, compared to untreated controls (82 + 9% vs 34 +/- 10%; p < 0.001); tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins were localized specifically to the mid-piece of the sperm. The profile of protein tyrosine phosphorylation was inhibitable by higher concentrations (> 0.5 mM) of tyrosine kinase inhibitor, tyrphostin A47. However, at lower (0.1-0.25 mM) concentrations, the compound interestingly induced early sperm capacitation and protein tyrosine phosphorylation, like PF. These results show that protein tyrosine phosphorylation in the mid-piece segment (mitochondrial sheath) appears to be an early and essential event during PF-induced capacitation and a regulated level of tyrosine phosphorylation of sperm proteins is critical for capacitation of hamster spermatozoa.  相似文献   

2.
Epac, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for the small GTPase Rap, binds to and is activated by the second messenger cAMP. In sperm, there are a number of signaling pathways required to achieve egg-fertilizing ability that depend upon an intracellular rise of cAMP. Most of these processes were thought to be mediated by cAMP-dependent protein kinases. Here we report a new dependence for the cAMP-induced acrosome reaction involving Epac. The acrosome reaction is a specialized type of regulated exocytosis leading to a massive fusion between the outer acrosomal and the plasma membranes of sperm cells. Ca2+ is the archetypical trigger of regulated exocytosis, and we show here that its effects on acrosomal release are fully mediated by cAMP. Ca2+ failed to trigger acrosomal exocytosis when intracellular cAMP was depleted by an exogenously added phosphodiesterase or when Epac was sequestered by specific blocking antibodies. The nondiscriminating dibutyryl-cAMP and the Epac-selective 8-(p-chlorophenylthio)-2'-O-methyladenosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphate analogues triggered the acrosome reaction in the effective absence of extracellular Ca2+. This indicates that cAMP, via Epac activation, has the ability to drive the whole cascade of events necessary to bring exocytosis to completion, including tethering and docking of the acrosome to the plasma membrane, priming of the fusion machinery, mobilization of intravesicular Ca2+, and ultimately, bilayer mixing and fusion. cAMP-elicited exocytosis was sensitive to anti-alpha-SNAP, anti-NSF, and anti-Rab3A antibodies, to intra-acrosomal Ca2+ chelators, and to botulinum toxins but was resistant to cAMP-dependent protein kinase blockers. These experiments thus identify Epac in human sperm and evince its indispensable role downstream of Ca2+ in exocytosis.  相似文献   

3.
Kinases, phosphatases and proteases during sperm capacitation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fertilization is the process by which male and female haploid gametes (sperm and egg) unite to produce a genetically distinct individual. In mammals, fertilization involves a number of sequential steps, including sperm migration through the female genital tract, sperm penetration through the cumulus mass, sperm adhesion and binding to the zona pellucida, acrosome exocytosis, sperm penetration through the zona and fusion of the sperm and egg plasma membranes. However, freshly ejaculated sperm are not capable of fertilizing an oocyte. They must first undergo a series of biochemical and physiological changes, collectively known as capacitation, before acquiring fertilizing capabilities. Several molecules are required for successful capacitation and in vitro fertilization; these include bicarbonate, serum albumin (normally bovine serum albumin, BSA) and Ca(2+). Bicarbonate activates the sperm protein soluble adenylyl cyclase (SACY), which results in increased levels of cAMP and cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) activation. The response to bicarbonate is fast and cAMP levels increase within 60?s followed by an increase in PKA activity. Several studies with an anti-phospho-PKA substrate antibody have demonstrated a rapid increase in protein phosphorylation in human, mouse and boar sperm. The target proteins of PKA are not known and the precise role of BSA during capacitation is unclear. Most of the studies provide support for the idea that BSA acts by removing cholesterol from the sperm. The loss of cholesterol has been suggested to affect the bilayer of the sperm plasma membrane making it more fusogenic. The relationship between cholesterol loss and the activation of the cAMP/PKA pathway is also unclear. During early stages of capacitation, Ca(2+) might be involved in the stimulation of SACY, although definitive proof is lacking. Protein tyrosine phosphorylation is another landmark of capacitation but occurs during the late stages of capacitation on a different time-scale from cAMP/PKA activation. Additionally, the tyrosine kinases present in sperm are not well characterized. Although protein phosphorylation depends upon the balanced action of protein kinases and protein phosphatase, we have even less information regarding the role of protein phosphatases during sperm capacitation. Over the last few years, several reports have pointed out that the ubiquitin-proteasome system might play a role during sperm capacitation, acrosome reaction and/or sperm-egg fusion. In the present review, we summarize the information regarding the role of protein kinases, phosphatases and the proteasome during sperm capacitation. Where appropriate, we give examples of the way that these molecules interact and regulate each other's activities.  相似文献   

4.
5.
In mammals, acquisition of fertilization competence of spermatozoa is dependent on the phenomenon of sperm capacitation. One of the critical molecular events of sperm capacitation is protein tyrosine phosphorylation. In a previous study, we demonstrated that a specific epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)‐tyrosine kinase inhibitor, tyrphostin‐A47, inhibited hamster sperm capacitation, accompanied by a reduced sperm protein tyrosine phosphorylation. Interestingly, a high percentage of tyrphostin‐A47‐treated spermatozoa exhibited circular motility, which was associated with a distinct hypo‐tyrosine phosphorylation of flagellar proteins, predominantly of Mr 45,000–60,000. In this study, we provide evidence on the localization of capacitation‐associated tyrosine‐phosphorylated proteins to the nonmembranous, structural components of the sperm flagellum. Consistent with this, we show their ultrastructural localization in the outer dense fiber, axoneme, and fibrous sheath of spermatozoa. Among hypo‐tyrosine phosphorylated major proteins of tyrphostin‐A47‐treated spermatozoa, we identified the 45 kDa protein as outer dense fiber protein‐2 and the 51 kDa protein as tektin‐2, components of the sperm outer dense fiber and axoneme, respectively. This study shows functional association of hypo‐tyrosine‐phosphorylation status of outer dense fiber protein‐2 and tektin‐2 with impaired flagellar bending of spermatozoa, following inhibition of EGFR‐tyrosine kinase, thereby showing the critical importance of flagellar protein tyrosine phosphorylation during capacitation and hyperactivation of hamster spermatozoa. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 77: 182–193, 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
Exocytosis is a highly regulated, multistage process consisting of multiple functionally definable stages, including recruitment, targeting, tethering, priming, and docking of secretory vesicles with the plasma membrane, followed by calcium-triggered membrane fusion. The acrosome reaction of spermatozoa is a complex, calcium-dependent regulated exocytosis. Fusion at multiple sites between the outer acrosomal membrane and the cell membrane causes the release of the acrosomal contents and the loss of the membranes surrounding the acrosome. Not much is known about the molecules that mediate membrane docking in this particular fusion model. In neurons, the formation of the ternary RIM/Munc13/Rab3A complex has been suggested as a critical component of synaptic vesicles docking. Previously, we demonstrated that Rab3A localizes to the acrosomal region in human sperm, stimulates acrosomal exocytosis, and participates in an early stage during membrane fusion. Here, we report that RIM and Munc13 are also present in human sperm and localize to the acrosomal region. Like Rab3A, RIM and Munc13 participate in a prefusion step before the efflux of intra-acrosomal calcium. By means of a functional assay using antibodies and recombinant proteins, we show that RIM, Munc13 and Rab3A interplay during acrosomal exocytosis. Finally, we report by electron transmission microscopy that sequestering RIM and Rab3A alters the docking of the acrosomal membrane to the plasma membrane during calcium-activated acrosomal exocytosis. Our results suggest that the RIM/Munc13/Rab3 A complex participates in acrosomal exocytosis and that RIM and Rab3A have central roles in membrane docking.  相似文献   

7.
The intraacrosomal calcium pool plays a direct role in acrosomal exocytosis   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The acrosome reaction is a unique type of regulated exocytosis. The single secretory granule of the sperm fuses at multiple points with the overlying plasma membrane. In the past few years we have characterized several aspects of this process using streptolysin O-permeabilized human spermatozoa. Here we show that Rab3A triggers acrosomal exocytosis in the virtual absence of calcium in the cytosolic compartment. Interestingly, exocytosis is blocked when calcium is depleted from intracellular stores. By using a membrane-permeant fluorescent calcium probe, we observed that the acrosome actually behaves as a calcium store. Depleting calcium from this compartment by using a light-sensitive chelator prevents secretion promoted by Rab3A. UV inactivation of the chelator restores exocytosis. Rab3A-triggered exocytosis is blocked by calcium pump and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP(3))-sensitive calcium channel inhibitors. Calcium measurements inside and outside the acrosome showed that Rab3A promotes a calcium efflux from the granule. Interestingly, release of calcium through IP(3)-sensitive calcium channels was necessary even when exocytosis was initiated by increasing free calcium in the extraacrosomal compartment in both permeabilized and intact spermatozoa. Our results show that a calcium efflux from the acrosome through IP(3)-sensitive channels is necessary downstream Rab3A activation during the membrane fusion process leading to acrosomal exocytosis.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the generation of nitric oxide by human spermatozoa is associated with human sperm capacitation and with the tyrosine phosphorylation of sperm proteins. Human spermatozoa were capacitated in the presence or absence of nitric oxide-releasing compounds or nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, and then the percentage of acrosome loss induced by human follicular fluid or by calcium ionophore was determined. The presence of the nitric oxide-releasing compounds primed spermatozoa to respond earlier to human follicular fluid whereas nitric oxide synthase inhibitors decreased the percentage of acrosome reaction. Moreover, nitric oxide modulated tyrosine phosphorylation of sperm proteins. A tight correlation between capacitation and tyrosine phosphorylation regulated by nitric oxide was observed. Results indicate that nitric oxide is involved in human sperm capacitation and emphasize the importance of oxidoreduction reactions in the fine control of sperm physiology.  相似文献   

9.
The sperm acrosome reaction and penetration of the egg follow zona pellucida binding only if the sperm has previously undergone the poorly understood maturation process known as capacitation. We demonstrate here that in vitro capacitation of bull, ram, mouse, and human sperm was accompanied by a time-dependent increase in actin polymerization. Induction of the acrosome reaction in capacitated cells initiated fast F-actin breakdown. Incubation of sperm in media lacking BSA or methyl-beta-cyclodextrin, Ca(2+), or NaHCO(3), components that are all required for capacitation, prevented actin polymerization as well as capacitation, as assessed by the ability of the cells to undergo the acrosome reaction. Inhibition of F-actin formation by cytochalasin D blocked sperm capacitation and reduced the in vitro fertilization rate of metaphase II-arrested mouse eggs. It has been suggested that protein tyrosine phosphorylation may represent an important regulatory pathway that is associated with sperm capacitation. We show here that factors known to stimulate sperm protein tyrosine phosphorylation (i.e., NaHCO(3), cAMP, epidermal growth factor, H(2)O(2), and sodium vanadate) were able to enhance actin polymerization, whereas inhibition of tyrosine kinases prevented F-actin formation. These data suggest that actin polymerization may represent an important regulatory pathway in with sperm capacitation, whereas F-actin breakdown occurs before the acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

10.
The aim of this work was to determine whether laminin (Ln), an extracellular matrix protein, induces the intracellular events that may be involved in producing the acrosome reaction in human sperm. To this end, we evaluated the effect of Ln on tyrosine phosphorylation, intracellular calcium concentration, proteasome activity, and phosphorylation in human sperm. Aliquots of highly motile sperm selected with a Percoll gradient, were incubated with different concentrations of Ln (0-20 μg/ml) for different periods (0-18 h). The percentage of viable acrosome-reacted sperm was evaluated using fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled Pisum sativum agglutinin and Hoechst 33258 DNA dye. Tyrosine phosphorylation was evaluated by Western blot analysis. The chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome was evaluated with a fluorogenic peptide, and intracellular calcium concentration was measured with fura-2. The results indicate that Ln stimulated the acrosome reaction of human sperm in a dose-dependent manner. This increase was drastically inhibited in the presence of herbimycin A, SU6656, and epoxomicin. In addition, Ln increased proteasome activity and phosphorylation; both events were inhibited by herbimycin A and SU6656. Finally, Ln induced an increase in intracellular calcium concentration, which was inhibited by SU6656 and epoxomicin. These results suggest that Ln is able to induce the acrosome reaction. This effect may be mediated by Src kinase and the proteasome, with the consequent induction of a calcium influx.  相似文献   

11.
Regulated secretion is a central issue for the specific function of many cells; for instance, mammalian sperm acrosomal exocytosis is essential for egg fertilization. ARF6 (ADP-ribosylation factor 6) is a small GTPase implicated in exocytosis, but its downstream effectors remain elusive in this process. We combined biochemical, functional, and microscopy-based methods to show that ARF6 is present in human sperm, localizes to the acrosomal region, and is required for calcium and diacylglycerol-induced exocytosis. Results from pulldown assays show that ARF6 exchanges GDP for GTP in sperm challenged with different exocytic stimuli. Myristoylated and guanosine 5′-3-O-(thio)triphosphate (GTPγS)-loaded ARF6 (active form) added to permeabilized sperm induces acrosome exocytosis even in the absence of extracellular calcium. We explore the ARF6 signaling cascade that promotes secretion. We demonstrate that ARF6 stimulates a sperm phospholipase D activity to produce phosphatidic acid and boosts the synthesis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate. We present direct evidence showing that active ARF6 increases phospholipase C activity, causing phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate hydrolysis and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-dependent intra-acrosomal calcium release. We show that active ARF6 increases the exchange of GDP for GTP on Rab3A, a prerequisite for secretion. We propose that exocytic stimuli activate ARF6, which is required for acrosomal calcium efflux and the assembly of the membrane fusion machinery. This report highlights the physiological importance of ARF6 as a key factor for human sperm exocytosis and fertilization.  相似文献   

12.
Despite extensive study of sperm motility, little is known of the mechanism of mammalian sperm hyperactivation. Here we describe a novel method for preparation of rodent sperm flagella and use it to show a correlation between tyrosine phosphorylation of flagellar proteins and hyperactivation of hamster sperm. When hyperactivation was produced by a 3.5-h incubation in a medium supporting capacitation, four major tyrosine-phosphorylated peptides of 90-, 80-, 62-, and 48-kDa mass were detected in flagellar extracts. Incubation with calyculin A, an inhibitor of protein phosphatases 1 and 2A, produced hyperactivation within 40 min but only a single 80-kDa phosphotyrosine-containing flagellar component. Conversely, incubation with inhibitors of either protein kinase A (H8) or protein tyrosine kinase (tyrphostin 47) prevented both hyperactivation and the production of tyrosine-phosphorylated flagellar peptides. These results indicate a strong correlation of hyperactivation with the tyrosine phosphorylation of sperm flagellar peptides, and they strongly implicate an 80-kDa component as a major mediator of the mechanism that produces hyperactivated motility of hamster sperm.  相似文献   

13.
Many cellular responses to the occupancy of membrane receptors include the hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol-4,5 bisphosphate (PIP2) by phospholipase C (PLC) and the subsequent generation of inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3) and diacylglycerol (DAG). In the gamete interaction system, sperm respond to binding to the egg's extracellular matrix, the zona pellucida (zp), by exocytosis of the acrosome in a process known as the acrosome reaction (AR). Under physiological conditions, zp binding stimulates ARs only after sperm have undergone a final maturation phase, known as capacitation. One of the zp glycoproteins, ZP3, serves as the ligand for sperm plasma membrane receptors and as the trigger for this regulated exocytosis. Both phosphoinositide-linked and tyrosine kinase-mediated pathways participate in the signalling cascade triggered by sperm-zp interaction. This paper reports that stimulation with solubilized zp increased PIP2-PLC enzymatic activity from mouse sperm. ZP3 is the zp component responsible for this stimulation. The effect was abolished by tyrphostin, suggesting that zp activation of PLC was mediated by tyrosine phosphorylation and that γ was the PLC isoform involved. We show the presence and distribution of PLCγ1 in mouse sperm. Immunostaining studies indicate that PLCγ1 is restricted to the sperm head. Sperm capacitation induced translocation of PLCγ1 from the soluble to the particulate fraction. These data suggest that PLCγ1 constitutes a component in the cascade that couples sperm binding to the egg's extracellular matrix with acrosomal exocytosis, a regulated secretory response upon which fertilization depends absolutely. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
The acrosome is an exocytic granule that overlies the spermatozoan nucleus. In response to different stimuli, it undergoes calcium-regulated exocytosis. Freshly ejaculated mammalian sperm are not immediately capable of undergoing acrosome reaction. The acquisition of this ability is called capacitation and involves a series of still not well-characterized changes in the sperm physiology. Plasma membrane cholesterol removal is one of the sperm modifications that are associated with capacitation. However, how sterols affect acrosomal exocytosis is unknown. Here, we show that short incubations with cyclodextrin, a cholesterol removal agent, just before stimulation promote acrosomal exocytosis. Moreover, the effect was also observed in permeabilized cells stimulated with calcium, indicating that cholesterol plays a direct role in the calcium-dependent exocytosis associated with acrosome reaction. Using a photo-inhibitable calcium chelator, we show that cholesterol affects an early event of the exocytic cascade rather than the lipid bilayers mixing. Functional data indicate that one target for the cholesterol effect is Rab3A. The sterol content does not affect the Rab3A activation-deactivation cycle but regulates its membrane anchoring. Western blot analysis and immunoelectron microscopy confirmed that cholesterol efflux facilitates Rab3A association to sperm plasma membrane. Our data indicate that the cholesterol efflux occurring during capacitation optimizes the conditions for the productive assembly of the fusion machinery required for acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

15.
Spermatozoa from teratospermic domestic cats (>60% morphologically abnormal spermatozoa per ejaculate) consistently exhibit lower levels of oocyte penetration in vitro than their normospermic (<40% abnormal spermatozoa per ejaculate) counterparts. This could be caused by structural abnormalities or intracellular defects resulting in disruption of normal cellular functions. Spermatozoa from teratospermic cats also are compromised in the ability to capacitate and undergo the acrosome reaction (AR) in vitro. Further, we recently identified two tyrosine phosphorylated proteins (95- and 160-kDa) localized over the acrosome region in domestic cat spermatozoa. Phosphorylation of these proteins is reduced in teratospermic compared with normospermic ejaculates. To begin to understand the relationship between tyrosine phosphorylation and sperm function, we examined the effects of two protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors (tyrphostin RG-50864 and genistein) on (1) sperm motility; (2) protein tyrosine phosphorylation; (3) the ionophore A23187-induced AR; (4) the spontaneous and zona pellucida (ZP)–induced AR, and (5) the ability of spermatozoa from normospermic cats to penetrate conspecific ZP-intact oocytes. Over a wide range of concentrations, neither inhibitor affected sperm percentage motility during incubation (P > 0.05). Preincubation with either inhibitor reduced tyrosine phosphorylation of both (95- and 160-kDa) sperm proteins. Although both inhibitors blocked the ZP-induced AR, neither influenced the spontaneous AR nor the A23187-induced AR, suggesting that tyrosine phosphorylation may be involved in physiologic AR. No differences (P > 0.05) were observed in the ability of control or inhibitor-treated spermatozoa to bind to or penetrate the outer ZP layer. However, percentages of oocytes with treated spermatozoa in the inner ZP (tyrphostin, 8.7%; genistein, 20.4%) and perivitelline space (tyrphostin, 0%; genistein, 2.3%) were less (P < 0.001) than untreated controls (inner ZP, 62.7%; perivitelline space, 10.2%). These results (1) demonstrate that ZP-induced acrosomal exocytosis in domestic cat spermatozoa is regulated via a tyrosine kinase–dependent pathway and (2) suggest that defects in these signaling pathways may represent one of the causes for compromised sperm function in teratospermic males. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 49:48–57, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
Caltrin is a small and basic protein of the seminal vesicle secretion that inhibits sperm calcium uptake. The influence of rat caltrin on sperm physiological processes related to fertilizing competence was studied by examining its effect on 1) spontaneous acrosomal exocytosis, 2) protein tyrosine phosphorylation, and 3) sperm-egg interaction. Results show that the presence of caltrin during in vitro capacitation both reduced the rate of spontaneous acrosomal exocytosis without altering the pattern of protein tyrosine phosphorylation, and enhanced the sperm ability to bind to the zona pellucida (ZP). The significantly higher proportion of sperm with intact acrosome observed in the presence of caltrin was accompanied by a strong inhibition in the acrosomal hyaluronidase release. Enhancement of sperm-ZP binding was evident by the increase in the percentage of eggs with bound spermatozoa as well as in the number of bound sperm per egg. Similar results were obtained when the assays were performed using spermatozoa preincubated with caltrin and then washed to remove the unbound protein, indicating that the sperm-bound caltrin was the one involved in both acrosomal exocytosis inhibition and sperm-ZP binding enhancement. Caltrin bound to the sperm head was partially released during the acrosomal exocytosis induced by Ca-ionophore A23187. Indirect immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy studies revealed that caltrin molecules distributed on the dorsal sperm surface disappeared after ionophore exposure, whereas those on the ventral region remained in this localization after the treatment. The present data suggest that rat caltrin molecules bound to the sperm head during ejaculation prevent the occurrence of the spontaneous acrosomal exocytosis along the female reproductive tract. Consequently, more competent spermatozoa with intact and functional acrosome would be available in the oviduct to participate in fertilization.  相似文献   

17.
We demonstrated previously the involvement of a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor containing an alpha7 subunit in the human sperm acrosome reaction (a modified exocytotic event essential to fertilization). Here we report the presence in human sperm of alpha7, alpha9, alpha3, alpha5, and beta4 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunits and the following proteins known to be associated with the receptor in the somatic cell: rapsyn and the tyrosine kinases c-SRC and FYN. The alpha7 subunit appears to exist as a homomer in the posterior post-acrosomal and neck regions of sperm and is probably linked to the cytoskeleton via rapsyn. The alpha3, alpha5, and beta4 subunits are present in the sperm flagellar mid-piece of sperm and possibly exist as alpha3alpha5beta4 and/or alpha3beta4 channels. The alpha9 subunit is present in the sperm mid-piece. We detected the FYN and c-SRC tyrosine kinases in the flagellar mid-piece region. Both co-precipitated only with the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor beta4 subunit. Immunolocalization with a C-terminal SRC kinase antibody, which recognizes several members of SRC kinase family, detected a SRC kinase co-localized with the alpha7 subunit in the neck region of sperm. Immunoprecipitation studies with that antibody demonstrated that the alpha7 subunit is associated with a SRC kinase. Antagonists of tyrosine phosphorylation inhibited the acetylcholine-initiated acrosome reaction, suggesting the involvement of a SRC kinase in the acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

18.
We have previously reported that synaptotagmin VI is present in human sperm cells and that a recombinant protein containing the C2A and C2B domains abrogates acrosomal exocytosis in permeabilized spermatozoa, an effect that was regulated by phosphorylation. In this report, we show that each individual C2 domain blocks acrosomal exocytosis. The inhibitory effect was completely abrogated by phosphorylation of the domains with purified PKCbetaII. We found by site-directed mutagenesis that Thr418 and/or Thr419 in the polybasic region (KKKTTIK) of the C2B domain--a key region for the function of synaptotagmins--are the PKC target that regulates its inhibitory effect on acrosomal exocytosis. Similarly, we showed that Thr284 in the polybasic region of C2A (KCKLQTR) is the target for PKC-mediated phosphorylation in this domain. An antibody that specifically binds to the phosphorylated polybasic region of the C2B domain recognized endogenous phosphorylated synaptotagmin in the sperm acrosomal region. The antibody was inhibitory only at early stages of exocytosis in sperm acrosome reaction assays, and the immunolabeling decreased upon sperm stimulation, indicating that the protein is dephosphorylated during acrosomal exocytosis. Our results indicate that acrosomal exocytosis is regulated through the PKC-mediated phosphorylation of conserved threonines in the polybasic regions of synaptotagmin VI.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: Nicotine-induced catecholamine secretion in bovine adrenomedullary chromaffin cells is accompanied by rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of multiple cellular proteins, most notably the mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs). The requirement for activation of tyrosine kinases and MAPKs in chromaffin cell exocytosis was investigated using a panel of tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Genistein and tyrphostin 23, two compounds that inhibit tyrosine kinases by distinct mechanisms, were found to inhibit secretion by >90% in cells stimulated by nicotine, 55 m M KCI, or the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. Inhibition of secretion induced by all three secretagogues correlated with a block in both protein tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of the MAPKs and their activators (MEKs) in situ. However, neither genistein nor tyrphostin 23 inhibited the activities of the MAPKs or MEKs in vitro. These results indicate that the target(s) of inhibition lie down-stream of Ca2+ influx and upstream of MEK activation. This Ca2+-activated tyrosine kinase activity could not be accounted for entirely by c-Src or Fyn (two nonreceptor tyrosine kinases that are expressed abundantly in chromaffin cells), because their in vitro kinase activities were not inhibited by tyrphostin 23 and only partially inhibited by genistein. These results demonstrate that an unidentified Ca2+-activated tyrosine kinase(s) is required for MAPK activation and exocytosis in chromaffin cells and suggest that MAPK participates in the regulation of secretion.  相似文献   

20.
Efficient in vitro capacitation of stallion sperm has not yet been achieved, as suggested by low sperm penetration rates reported in in vitro fertilization (IVF) studies. Our objectives were to evaluate defined incubation conditions that would support changes consistent with capacitation in stallion sperm. Protein tyrosine phosphorylation events and the ability of sperm to undergo acrosomal exocytosis under various incubation conditions were used as end points for capacitation. Sperm incubated 4-6h in modified Whitten's (MW) with the addition of 25 mM NaHCO3 and 7 mg/mL BSA (capacitating medium) yielded high rates of protein tyrosine phosphorylation. Either HCO3(-) or BSA was required to support these changes, with the combination of both providing the most intense results. When a membrane-permeable form of cAMP and a phosphodiesterase inhibitor (IBMX) were added to MW in the absence of HCO3(-) and BSA, the tyrosine phosphorylation results obtained in our capacitating conditions could not be replicated, suggesting either effects apart from cAMP were responsible for tyrosine phosphorylation, or that stallion sperm might respond differently to these reagents as compared to sperm from other mammals. Sperm incubation in capacitating conditions was also associated with high percentages (P相似文献   

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