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1.
Eggs of the newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, arrested at the second meiotic metaphase are activated by sperm at fertilization and then complete meiosis to initiate development. We highly purified a sperm factor for egg activation from a sperm extract with several chromatographies. The purified fraction containing only a 45 kDa protein induced egg activation accompanied by an intracellular Ca2+ increase when injected into unfertilized eggs. Although injection of mouse phospholipase C (PLC) zeta-mRNA caused a Ca2+ increase and egg activation, partial amino acid sequences of the 45 kDa protein were homologous to those of Xenopus citrate synthase, but not to PLCs. An anti-porcine citrate synthase antibody recognized the 45 kDa protein both in the purified fraction and in the sperm extract. Treatment with the anti-citrate synthase antibody reduced the egg-activation activity in the sperm extract. Injection of porcine citrate synthase or mRNA of Xenopus citrate synthase induced a Ca2+ increase and caused egg activation. A large amount of the 45 kDa protein was localized in two lines elongated from the neck to the middle piece of sperm. These results indicate that the 45 kDa protein is a major component of the sperm factor for egg activation at newt fertilization.  相似文献   

2.
An in vitro binding assay involving egg plasma membrane vesicles (PMVs) of Fucus serratus L. and proteins contained in a KCl extract of sperm has been used to identify a sperm protein involved in egg binding. High-performance gel filtration (HPGF) separated the sperm KCl extract into several major fractions, and a protein (apparent M, 60 kDa) was identified as being involved in binding to the egg PMVs. This protein ran on denaturing sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)gels with an apparent molecular weight of 27 kDa. This suggests that either the native form of the protein is a dimer or the molecular weight on HPGF is an artifact caused by high ionic strength buffer promoting hydrophobic interactions. When KCl-sol-uble proteins were separated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), blotted onto nitrocellulose, and incubated with biotinylated egg PMVs, these bound to a band at 27 kDa, confirming the role of this protein. Addition of the Fucus sperm extract or HPGF fractions containing the binding protein to eggs in the absence of sperm induced the release of polysaccharides onto the egg cell surface. This labeling was patchy, in contrast to the uniform release of polysaccharides observed when sperm were added to eggs. The monoclonal antibody (MAb) FS17 was raised against the 27-kDa sperm protein. It labeled the sperm body and both flagella by immunofluorescence, though the sperm had to he permeabilized to observe labeling, suggesting that the epitope recognized is not exposed at the cell surface. Addition of FS17 to the KCl extract in the binding assay reduced subsequent binding of egg PMVs. Removal of the 27-kDa protein recognized by FS17 from the sperm extract prevented the binding of egg PMVs in the binding assay and the triggering of the patchy release of polysaccharides when added to eggs. Overall the results suggest that the 27-kDa sperm protein is involved in binding to the egg plasma membrane and can trigger partial activation of the egg .  相似文献   

3.
Mammalian sperm-borne oocyte activating factor (SOAF) induces oocyte activation from a compartment that engages the oocyte cytoplasm, but it is not known how. A SOAF-containing extract (SE) was solubilized from the submembrane perinuclear matrix, a domain that enters the egg. SE initiated activation sufficient for full development. Microinjection coupled to tandem mass spectrometry enabled functional correlation profiling of fractionated SE without a priori assumptions about its chemical nature. Phospholipase C-zeta (PLCzeta) correlated absolutely with activating ability. Immunoblotting confirmed this and showed that the perinuclear matrix is the major site of 72-kDa PLCzeta. Oocyte activation was efficiently induced by 1.25 fg of sperm PLCzeta, corresponding to a fraction of one sperm equivalent (approximately 0.03). Immunofluorescence microscopy localized sperm head PLCzeta to a post-acrosomal region that becomes rapidly exposed to the ooplasm following gamete fusion. This multifaceted approach suggests a mechanism by which PLCzeta originates from an oocyte-penetrating assembly--the sperm perinuclear matrix--to induce mammalian oocyte activation at fertilization.  相似文献   

4.
During oocyte maturation, eggs acquire the ability to generate specialized Ca(2+) signals in response to sperm entry. Such Ca(2+) signals are crucial for egg activation and the initiation of embryonic development. We examined the regulation during Xenopus oocyte maturation of store-operated Ca(2+) entry (SOCE), an important Ca(2+) influx pathway in oocytes and other nonexcitable cells. We have previously shown that SOCE inactivates during Xenopus oocyte meiosis. SOCE inactivation may be important in preventing premature egg activation. In this study, we investigated the correlation between SOCE inactivation and the Mos-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-maturation-promoting factor (MPF) kinase cascade, which drives Xenopus oocyte maturation. SOCE inactivation at germinal vesicle breakdown coincides with an increase in the levels of MAPK and MPF. By differentially inducing Mos, MAPK, and MPF, we demonstrate that the activation of MPF is necessary for SOCE inactivation during oocyte maturation. In contrast, sustained high levels of Mos kinase and the MAPK cascade have no effect on SOCE activation. We further show that preactivated SOCE is not inactivated by MPF, suggesting that MPF does not block Ca(2+) influx through SOCE channels, but rather inhibits coupling between store depletion and SOCE activation.  相似文献   

5.
Nuclei transplanted into unactivated amphibian eggs are known to condense into metaphase chromosomes whereas those transplanted into activated eggs decondense and enlarge. We have made cell-free cytoplasmic preparations from Rana pipiens eggs which can induce demembranated Xenopus laevis sperm to undergo changes similar to those seen in intact eggs. Sperm chromatin which is incubated for 3 hr in unactivated egg preparations made using a buffer containing 3 mM EGTA is induced to form metaphase chromosomes. However, decondensed interphase nuclei are formed when chromatin is incubated in unactivated egg preparations made without EGTA as well as in activated egg preparations. When Ca2+ ions are added to unactivated egg preparations made with EGTA, the preparations lose the ability to induce metaphase chromosome formation and become capable of decondensing sperm chromatin. Once the ability to decondense chromatin has developed, either in unactivated or activated egg preparations, it cannot be suppressed by the addition of EGTA. However, decondensation of sperm chromatin in activated egg preparations can be suppressed by the addition of unactivated egg preparations made with EGTA. In this case, the incubated sperm chromatin is induced to form metaphase chromosomes. These results may indicate that the chromosome condensation activity of unactivated egg cytoplasm can be sustained in cell-free preparations when Ca2+ ion levels are kept low, but when Ca2+ ion levels increase this activity is lost and replaced by a new activity which can decondense chromatin. Since this change in cytoplasmic activities is comparable to that occurring in the intact egg following fertilization, these results suggest that Ca2+ ions play a crucial role during activation in altering the cytoplasmic activities which control nuclear behavior.  相似文献   

6.
A fraction of acrosomal proteins dispersed during calcium ionophore A23187‐induced acrosome reaction was prepared from cauda epididymal sperm of wild‐type and acrosin‐deficient mice, rat, and hamster. The acrosome‐reacted sperm were further extracted by Nonidet P‐40 to obtain the detergent‐soluble protein fraction. Activities of serine proteases in the two protein fractions were examined by sodium dodecyl sulfate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of gelatin. A mixture of 42‐ and 41‐kDa gelatin‐hydrolyzing proteases was found in both fractions of the wild‐type mouse sperm, whereas the acrosin‐deficient mouse sperm contained the active 42‐kDa protease and apparently lacked the activity of the 41‐kDa protease. However, exogenous bovine pancreatic trypsin compensated for the absence of acrosin in the protein fractions of the mutant mouse sperm; the gelatin‐hydrolyzing activity of the 41‐kDa protease appeared when the sperm proteins of the mutant mice were treated with pancreatic trypsin. Two‐dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that the 42‐ and 41‐kDa proteases were distinguished from acrosin by the isoelectric point and immunoreactivity with affinity‐purified antibody against an oligopeptide corresponding to the N‐terminal amino acid sequence of mouse proacrosin. Moreover, the gelatin‐hydrolyzing proteins corresponding to these two proteases were not detected in rat and hamster sperm, in spite of the treatment of the sperm extracts with pancreatic trypsin, and the total amount of gelatin‐hydrolyzing activities in mouse was much smaller than those in rat and hamster. These results may reflect the difference of the serine protease system for the sperm penetration through the egg zona pellucida between mouse and other rodent animals, possibly explaining why the acrosin‐deficient mouse sperm are capable of penetrating the zona pellucida. Dev. Genet. 25:115–122, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
Unfertilized eggs of the newt Cynops pyrrhogaster are arrested at the second meiotic metaphase. The primary signal for egg activation is a transient increase in [Ca2+](i), which is triggered by the fertilizing sperm and propagates over the egg cortex as a Ca2+ wave. We injected an extract of Cynops sperm (SE) into unfertilized eggs and induced a wave-like [Ca2+](i) increase which resulted in activation and resumption of meiosis. The SE-injected eggs showed degradation of cyclin B1 and DNA replication. When SE was boiled or treated with proteinase K before injection, it was unable to cause egg activation. Preinjection of Ca2+ -chelator BAPTA before SE injection inhibited egg activation. These results indicate that a heat-labile and proteinaceous factor in the sperm cytoplasm induces a transient increase in [Ca2+](i) which is required for egg activation. Injection of IP3 into unfertilized eggs caused an increase in [Ca2+](i) and egg activation, but injection of cADP-ribose did not. These results support the hypothesis that Ca2+ release at fertilization occurs via IP3 receptors.  相似文献   

8.
The newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, exhibits physiological polyspermic fertilization, in which several sperm enter an egg before egg activation. An intracellular Ca(2+) increase occurs as a Ca(2+) wave at each sperm entry site in the polyspermic egg. Some Ca(2+) waves are preceded by a transient spike-like Ca(2+) increase, probably caused by a tryptic protease in the sperm acrosome at the contact of sperm on the egg surface. The following Ca(2+) wave was induced by a sperm factor derived from sperm cytoplasm after sperm-egg membrane fusion. The Ca(2+) increase in the isolated, cell-free cytoplasm indicates that the endoplasmic reticulum is the major Ca(2+) store for the Ca(2+) wave. We previously demonstrated that citrate synthase in the sperm cytoplasm is a major sperm factor for egg activation in newt fertilization. In the present study, we found that the activation by the sperm factor as well as by fertilizing sperm was prevented by an inhibitor of citrate synthase, palmitoyl CoA, and that an injection of acetyl-CoA or oxaloacetate caused egg activation, indicating that the citrate synthase activity is necessary for egg activation at fertilization. In the frog, Xenopus laevis, which exhibits monospermic fertilization, we were unable to activate the eggs with either the homologous sperm extract or the Cynops sperm extract, indicating that Xenopus sperm lack the sperm factor for egg activation and that their eggs are insensitive to the newt sperm factor. The mechanism of egg activation in the monospermy of frog eggs is quite different from that in the physiological polyspermy of newt eggs.  相似文献   

9.
Studies were made on which components of sperm were able to induce aster formation and cleavage of eggs of the sea urchin Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus. The sperm components were separated by homogenization and centrifugation into the following 3 fractions: the head-midpiece, midpiece and tail. The head-midpiece fraction was then divided into 2 sub-fractions, the centriole sub-fraction and the centriole-free sub-fractions. Each fraction was injected into unfertilized eggs and after 15–30 min the eggs were inseminated. The ability of a fraction or a sub-fraction to induce aster formation and cleavage was deduced from the frequency of multipolar cleavage. The head-midpiece fraction and the centriole sub-fraction were effective in inducing aster formation and cleavage, but the other fractions were not. It was concluded that isolated centrioles from sea urchin sperm act as division centers in the egg.  相似文献   

10.
At fertilisation, the sperm triggers an abrupt and transient increase in intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) in the oocyte cytoplasm. In eutherian mammals, oocytes exhibit multiple [Ca2+]i transients which are necessary for egg activation. We investigated [Ca2+]i in the marsupial opossum, Monodelphis domestica. Embryo development in this therian mammal is quite distinct from that in most Eutheria. Oestrus was induced in an adult female opossum by introduction of a male into her cage. Injection of a boar sperm extract induced repetitive increases in [Ca2+]i. Each oscillation travelled across and around the periphery of the egg in a wave-like manner. A control injection of KCl elicited no change in [Ca2+]i. This is the first observation of [Ca2+]i oscillations in the oocyte of a marsupial. The repetitive nature of the [Ca2+]i changes were more similar to those in oocytes of Eutheria than those in oocytes of non-mammalian vertebrates.  相似文献   

11.
Activation of mammalian oocytes by a factor obtained from rabbit sperm   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
In this study a fraction was prepared from rabbit sperm that activated rabbit and mouse oocytes following injection into the cytoplasm. The sperm factor activated oocytes exhibited cortical granule exocytosis, pronuclear formation, and cleavage. The sperm factor was soluble in aqueous solution and was not active extracellularly. Unlike most artificial activation methods that are only effective with aged oocytes, the sperm factor activated recently ovulated oocytes. The factor appears to be a protein or associated with a protein but not an acrosomal protein. Fractions from both mouse and bull sperm did not activate rabbit or mouse oocytes. Their inactivity may be owing to the techniques used to recover the fractions or differences between species in sperm morphology and fertilization processes. These observations support the hypothesis that oocyte activation is induced by a factor within sperm that is released into the cytoplasm of the oocyte at the time of sperm-oocyte fusion.  相似文献   

12.
In most species, cortical granule exocytosis is characteristic of egg activation by sperm. It is a Ca(2+)-mediated event which results in elevation of the vitelline coat to block permanently the polyspermy at fertilization. We examined the effect of mastoparan, an activator of G-proteins, on the sea urchin egg activation. Mastoparan was able to induce, in a concentration-dependent manner, the egg cortical granule exocytosis; mastoparan-17, an inactive analogue of mastoparan, had no effect. Mastoparan, but not sperm, induced cortical granule exocytosis in eggs preloaded with BAPTA, a Ca(2+) chelator. In isolated egg cortical lawns, which are vitelline layers and membrane fragments with endogenously docked cortical granules, mastoparan induced cortical granule fusion in a Ca(2+)-independent manner. By contrast, mastoparan-17 did not trigger fusion. We conclude that in sea urchin eggs mastoparan stimulates exocytosis at a Ca(2+)-independent late site of the signaling pathway that culminates in cortical granule discharge.  相似文献   

13.
Fertilization in the female reproductive tract depends on intercellular signaling mechanisms that coordinate sperm presence with oocyte meiotic progression. To achieve this coordination in Caenorhabditis elegans, sperm release an extracellular signal, the major sperm protein (MSP), to induce oocyte meiotic maturation and ovulation. MSP binds to multiple receptors, including the VAB-1 Eph receptor protein-tyrosine kinase on oocyte and ovarian sheath cell surfaces. Canonical VAB-1 ligands called ephrins negatively regulate oocyte maturation and MPK-1 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation. Here, we show that MSP and VAB-1 regulate the signaling properties of two Ca2+ channels that are encoded by the NMR-1 N-methyl D-aspartate type glutamate receptor subunit and ITR-1 inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor. Ephrin/VAB-1 signaling acts upstream of ITR-1 to inhibit meiotic resumption, while NMR-1 prevents signaling by the UNC-43 Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII). MSP binding to VAB-1 stimulates NMR-1-dependent UNC-43 activation, and UNC-43 acts redundantly in oocytes to promote oocyte maturation and MAPK activation. Our results support a model in which VAB-1 switches from a negative regulator into a redundant positive regulator of oocyte maturation upon binding to MSP. NMR-1 mediates this switch by controlling UNC-43 CaMKII activation at the oocyte cortex.  相似文献   

14.
In the initial stage of ascidian fertilization sequential sperm–egg coat interactions assure successful species-specific fertilization. Sperm recognize, bind to, and then penetrate the egg investment that consists of follicle cells (FC) and an acellular vitelline coat (VC). To identify plasma proteins that recognize the egg coat, a membrane fraction was prepared from Phallusia mammillata sperm using nitrogen cavitation followed by three centrifugation steps. The purity of the membrane fractions was assessed by transmission electron microscopy and marker enzymes. Comparison of the electrophoretic pattern of sperm extracellular membrane domains labeled by radio-iodination or biotinylation and recorded by autoradiography or enhanced chemiluminescence, respectively, showed the non-radioactive procedure to be a convenient and efficient method. Isolated sperm membrane components were found to inhibit fertilization in a concentration-dependent manner and to bind mainly to the FC. Eggs were used as an affinity matrix to determine which of the solubilized sperm membrane proteins possess egg-binding activity. Three biotinylated proteins (66kDa, 120kDa and 140kDa) were found to bind to the VC. Assays probing heterospecific binding to Ascidia mentula eggs revealed that the 120kDa protein possesses species-specific binding activity. Thus, the current data suggest the 120 kDa sperm membrane protein as a candidate adhesion molecule with a possible role in gamete binding and species-specific recognition in P. mammillata .  相似文献   

15.
A cytosolic sperm protein(s), referred to as sperm factor (SF), is delivered into eggs by the sperm during mammalian fertilization to induce repetitive increases in the intracellular concentration of free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) that are referred to as [Ca2+]i oscillations. [Ca2+]i oscillations are essential for egg activation and early embryonic development. Recent evidence shows that the novel sperm-specific phospholipase C (PLC), PLCzeta, may be the long sought after [Ca2+]i oscillation-inducing SF. Here, we demonstrate the complete extraction of SF from porcine sperm and show that regardless of the method of extraction a single molecule/complex appears to be responsible for the [Ca2+]i oscillation-inducing activity of these extracts. Consistent with this notion, all sperm fractions that induced [Ca2+]i oscillations, including FPLC-purified fractions, exhibited high in vitro PLC activity at basal Ca2+ levels (0.1-5 microM), a hallmark of PLCzeta. Notably, we detected immunoreactive 72-kDa PLCzeta in an inactive fraction, and several fractions capable of inducing oscillations were devoid of 72-kDa PLCzeta. Nonetheless, in the latter fractions, proteolytic fragments, presumably corresponding to cleaved forms of PLCzeta, were detected by immunoblotting. Therefore, our findings corroborate the hypothesis that a sperm-specific PLC is the main component of the [Ca2+]i oscillation-inducing activity of sperm but provide evidence that the presence of 72-kDa PLCzeta does not precisely correspond with the Ca2+ releasing activity of porcine sperm fractions.  相似文献   

16.
We have previously described a phospholipase C (PLC) activity in mammalian sperm cytosolic extracts. Here we have examined the Ca(2+) dependency of the enzyme, whether there is enough in a single sperm to account for Ca(2+) release at fertilization, and finally where in the egg is the phosphatidyl 4,5-bisphosphate, the substrate for the enzyme. As for all PLCs examined so far in vitro, we found that the boar sperm PLC activity was Ca(2+) dependent. Specific activity increased when free Ca(2+) levels were micromolar. However, even at nanomolar free Ca(2+) concentration the boar sperm PLC activity was considerable, being two orders of magnitude greater than PLC activities in other tissues. We calculated that PLC activity of a single boar sperm in a mammalian egg is enough to generate 400 nM inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP(3)) in 1 min, which may be sufficient to account for the observed Ca(2+) changes in an egg at fertilization. We fractionated sea urchin egg homogenate and examined the ability of boar sperm extract to generate InsP(3) from these fractions. The sperm PLC activity triggered InsP(3) production from a PIP(2)-enriched nonmicrosomal egg compartment that contained yolk platelets. We propose that this sperm PLC activity, which is active at nanomolar Ca(2+) levels and hydrolyzes PIP(2) from intracellular membranes, could be involved in the Ca(2+) changes observed at fertilization.  相似文献   

17.
Demembranated euryhaline tilapia Oreochromis mossambicus sperm were reactivated in the presence of concentrations in excess of 10(-6) M Ca(2+). Motility features changed when Ca(2+) concentrations were increased from 10(-6) to 10(-5) M. Although the beat frequency did not increase, the shear angle and wave amplitude of flagellar beating increased, suggesting that the sliding velocity of microtubules in the axoneme, which represents dynein activity, rises with an increase in Ca(2+). Thus, it is possible that Ca(2+) binds to flagellar proteins to activate flagellar motility as a result of the enhanced dynein activity. One Ca(2+)-binding protein (18 kDa, pI 4.0), calmodulin (CaM), was detected by (45)Ca overlay assay and immunologically. A CaM antagonist, W-7, suppressed the reactivation ratio and swimming speed, suggesting that the 18 kDa Ca(2+)-binding protein is CaM and that CaM regulates flagellar motility. CaMKIV was detected immunologically as a single 48 kDa band in both the fraction of low ion extract of the axoneme and the remnant of the axoneme, suggesting that CaMKIV binds to distinct positions in the axoneme. It is possible that CaMKIV phosphorylates the axonemal proteins in a Ca(2+)/CaM-dependent manner for regulating the dynein activity. A (32)P-uptake in the axoneme showed that 48, 75, 120, 200, 250, 380, and 400 kDa proteins were phosphorylated in a Ca(2+)/CaM kinase-dependent manner. Proteins (380 kDa) were phosphorylated in the presence of 10(-5) M Ca(2+). It is possible that an increase in Ca(2+) induces Ca(2+)/CaM kinase-dependent regulation, including protein phosphorylation for activation/regulation of dynein activity in flagellar axoneme.  相似文献   

18.
NAADP is a highly potent mobilizer of Ca(2+), which in turn triggers Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release pathways in a wide range of species. Nevertheless, NAADP is not presently classified as a second messenger because it has not been shown to increase in response to a physiological stimulus. We now report a dramatic increase in NAADP during sea urchin egg fertilization that was largely due to production in sperm upon contacting egg jelly. The NAADP bolus plays a physiological role upon delivery to the egg based on its ability to induce a cortical flash, a depolarization-induced activation of L-type Ca(2+) channels. Moreover, the sperm-induced cortical flash was eliminated in eggs desensitized to NAADP. We conclude that an NAADP increase plays a physiologically relevant role during fertilization and provides the first conclusive demonstration that NAADP is a genuine second messenger.  相似文献   

19.
Our knowledge of the molecules that interact with sperm at the egg membrane is restricted to a short list. In the eggs of Discoglossus pictus, fusion with sperm is limited to a differentiated structure, the dimple, offering several advantages for detecting molecules involved in fertilization. Previous studies have identified fucosylated glycoproteins of 200, 260, and 270 kDa located at the surface of the dimple that are able to bind sperm in vitro. Here, we show that dimple glycoproteins and a protein represented by a 120‐kDa band released following gel‐into‐gel SDS–PAGE of both glycoproteins share the same N‐terminal amino acid sequence, which itself is similar to the N‐termini of Xenopus liver‐synthesized vitellogenin (VTG) and the lipovitellin 1. MALDI/MS mass spectrometry indicated that the 120‐kDa band is part of both gps 200 and 270/260. A 117‐kDa major protein of the egg lysate exhibits the same MALDI/MS spectrum, and LC‐MSMS indicates that this is a lipovitellin 1 (DpLIV) that coincides with the 120‐kDa band and is responsible for the formation of the 200–270‐kDa dimers. Therefore, lipovitellin 1 constitutes the protein backbone of the dimple glycoconjugates. In vitro assays using polystyrene beads coated with DpLIV or with its dimers indicate that significant sperm binding occurs only with DpLIV dimers. In amphibians, VTG is taken up by the oocyte, where it releases lipovitellins destined to form yolk. In Discoglossus, our data suggest that yolk proteins are also synthesized by the oocyte. The dimple forms in the ovulated oocyte following the exocytosis of vesicles that likely expose DpLIVs at their membrane. Indeed, in whole mounts of immunostained eggs, anti‐vitellogenin antibodies label only the surface of the dimple. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 78:161–171, 2011. © 2011 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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