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1.
《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   

2.
Immature sperm from the caput epididymis are immotile and infertile. It is thought that caput epididymal sperm are infertile due to their immotility, as well as to an inability to bind to the zona pellucida, suggesting the absence of a functional receptor for the zona. However, the sperm receptor for the zona pellucida has been identified previously as the enzyme galactosyltransferase (GalTase) (L. C. Lopez et al. (1985) J. Cell Biol. 101, 1501-1510) and is present on the surface of caput as well as cauda epididymal sperm (N. F. Scully et al., (1987) Dev. Biol. 124, 111-124.). In this paper we examine this apparent conflict and show that immotile caput epididymal sperm are able to bind to the zona pellucida if they are first washed free of caput epididymal secretions, which contain factors that inhibit sperm-zona binding. Consistent with this finding are results that show that caput epididymal fluid is capable of inhibiting the binding of mature, cauda epididymal sperm to the zona pellucida. Caput epididymal fluid contains, among many other components, a soluble GalTase and an alpha-lactalbumin-like protein, both of which are capable of inhibiting mouse sperm-zona binding. Thus, caput epididymal sperm have the appropriate receptor, i.e., GalTase, for the zona pellucida, to which they can bind if removed from the inhibitory factors that mask their zona-binding ability.  相似文献   

3.
Mouse sperm surface galactosyltransferase (GalTase) mediates fertilization by binding to its appropriate glycoconjugate substrate in the egg zona pellucida. GalTase is present throughout all stages of spermatogenesis, during which time it redistributes within the plasma membrane from a uniform, diffuse distribution on primary spermatocytes to a restricted domain overlying the dorsal surface of the acrosome. Previously, we have shown that GalTase activity is elevated on transmission-distorting t-bearing sperm populations, relative to normal sperm, and in this paper, we define the stage when surface GalTase activity becomes elevated during t spermatogenesis. GalTase specific activity is equal between normal and t-bearing primary spermatocytes, but following meiosis, surface GalTase activity becomes elevated nearly fourfold on t-bearing round spermatids. The increased GalTase activity on t-bearing spermatids is not due to decreased hydrolysis of the GalTase substrates, and is appropriately localized over the acrosomal region, even on misshapen sperm heads occasionally seen in t-sperm populations. These studies define the stage when a specific biochemical defect associated with mutant alleles of the T/t complex first becomes detectable. The t factors that elevate GalTase activity on round spermatids may be similar to previously identified t-specific testicular proteins that are maximally expressed at the same developmental stage, and which map to the same portion of the T/t complex.  相似文献   

4.
Fucosyltransferase activity was quantified in mouse germ cells at different stages of spermatogenesis. Specifically, fucosyltransferase activities of pachytene spermatocytes, round spermatids, and cauda epididymal sperm were compared. Fucosyltransferase activity of mixed germ cells displayed an apparent Vmax of 17 pmol (mg of protein)-1 min-1 and an apparent Km of approximately 13 microM for GDP-L-[14C]fucose in the presence of saturating amounts of asialofetuin at 33 degrees C. Under these conditions, cellular fucosyltransferase activity was found to increase during spermatogenesis. In agreement with assays of intact cells, examination of subcellular fractions indicated that a large fraction of fucosyltransferase activity was associated with the cell surface. The fraction of fucosyltransferase activity that was associated with the cell surface progressively increased throughout spermatogenesis and epididymal maturation so that nearly all of the fucosyltransferase in epididymal sperm was on the cell surface. Specifically, by comparison of activities in the presence and absence of the detergent NP-40, the fraction of fucosyltransferase activity that was associated with the cell surface in pachytene spermatocytes, round spermatids, and epididymal sperm was 0.36, 0.5, and 0.85, respectively. These results suggest that a cell surface fucosyltransferase may be important during differentiation of spermatogenic cells in the testis as well as during epididymal maturation and fertilization.  相似文献   

5.
Using a monoclonal antibody as a highly specific probe and a seminal particle-free fraction of rabbit ejaculated spermatozoa, actin has been localized in the postacrosomal region of mature rabbit spermatozoa. The sperm actin has been extracted and identified on two-dimensional PAGE immunoblots as a single spot of pI = 5.45 and Mr = 43,000. Rabbit sperm actin is present in a nonfilamentous form and is not removed by removing the plasma membrane. Unlike mature spermatozoa, however, filamentous actin is present in spermatogenic cells, as determined by rhodamine phalloidin staining. Starting as diffusely distributed in spermatocytes, actin accumulates in the subacrosomal space and appears as a band in conjunction with the developing acrosome. This band lengthens throughout the spermatid stage and becomes continuous with the postacrosomal region staining in testicular spermatozoa. Actin may therefore function during spermatogenesis to both shape the acrosome to the nucleus and to anchor inner acrosomal membrane proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Guanine nucleotide-binding proteins (G proteins) are important signal transducing molecules found in all cells. G proteins are associated with the plasma membrane/outer acrosomal membrane region of acrosome-intact sperm and at least one G protein is involved in the zona pellucida-induced acrosome reaction. With the goal of elucidating the functions of these proteins during spermatogenesis, we investigated the types of G proteins present in spermatogenic cells and when they first become associated with the developing acrosome. Using bacterial toxin-catalyzed [32P]ADP-ribosylation in conjunction with immunoprecipitation and immunofluorescence utilizing antibodies directed against specific regions of various G protein isotypes, the alpha subunits of Gi1, Gi2, Gi3, and G(o) were detected in mouse spermatocytes and spermatids. An antiserum recognizing a conserved sequence of G alpha i subtypes localized to the proacrosomal granules of spermatocytes and the developing acrosome of spermatids. Levels of G alpha o diminished as spermatocytes developed into spermatids such that G alpha o was not detected in cauda epididymal sperm. Immunoreactivity using G alpha o-specific antisera did not display a distinct regionalization within any of the spermatogenic cell types. G alpha s was not detected in the developing spermatogenic cells or sperm. The association of G alpha i with the developing acrosome suggests a role for G proteins may have a role in acrosome biogenesis as well as being part of a complex required later for signal transduction leading to acrosomal exocytosis.  相似文献   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,126(6):1573-1583
Sperm surface beta 1,4-galactosyltransferase (GalTase) mediates fertilization in mice by binding to specific O-linked oligosaccharide ligands on the egg coat glycoprotein ZP3. Before binding the egg, sperm GalTase is masked by epididymally derived glycosides that are shed from the sperm surface during capacitation. After binding the egg, sperm- bound oligosaccharides on ZP3 induce the acrosome reaction by receptor aggregation, presumably involving GalTase. In this study, we asked how increasing the levels of sperm surface GalTase would affect sperm-egg interactions using transgenic mice that overexpress GalTase under the control of a heterologous promoter. GalTase expression was elevated in many tissues in adult transgenic animals, including testis. Sperm from transgenic males had approximately six times the wild-type level of surface GalTase protein, which was localized appropriately on the sperm head as revealed by indirect immunofluorescence. As expected, sperm from transgenic mice bound more radiolabeled ZP3 than did wild-type sperm. However, sperm from transgenic animals were relatively unable to bind eggs, as compared to sperm from wild-type animals. The mechanistic basis for the reduced egg-binding ability of transgenic sperm was attributed to alterations in two GalTase-dependent events. First, transgenic sperm that overexpress surface GalTase bound more epididymal glycoside substrates than did sperm from wild-type mice, thus masking GalTase and preventing it from interacting with its zona pellucida ligand. Second, those sperm from transgenic mice that were able to bind the zona pellucida were hypersensitive to ZP3, such that they underwent precocious acrosome reactions and bound to eggs more tenuously than did wild-type sperm. These results demonstrate that sperm-egg binding requires an optimal, rather than maximal, level of surface GalTase expression, since increasing this level decreases sperm reproductive efficiency both before and after egg binding. Although sperm GalTase is required for fertilization by serving as a receptor for the egg zona pellucida, excess surface GalTase is counterproductive to successful sperm-egg binding.  相似文献   

8.
Past studies from this laboratory have suggested that mouse sperm binding to the egg zona pellucida is mediated by a sperm galactosyltransferase (GalTase), which recognizes and binds to terminal N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) residues in the zona pellucida (Shur, B. D., and N. G. Hall, 1982, J. Cell Biol. 95:567-573; 95:574-579). We now present evidence that directly supports this mechanism for gamete binding. GalTase was purified to homogeneity by sequential affinity-chromatography on GlcNAc-agarose and alpha-lactalbumin-agarose columns. The purified enzyme produced a dose-dependent inhibition of sperm binding to the zona pellucida, relative to controls. To inhibit sperm/zona binding, GalTase had to retain its native conformation, since neither heat-inactivated nor Mn++-deficient GalTase inhibited sperm binding. GalTase inhibition of sperm/zona binding was not due to steric blocking of an adjacent sperm receptor on the zona, since GalTase could be released from the zona pellucida by forced galactosylation with UDPGal, and the resulting galactosylated zona was still incapable of binding sperm. In control experiments, when UDPGal was replaced with the inappropriate sugar nucleotide, UDPglucose, sperm binding to the zona pellucida remained normal after the adsorbed GalTase was washed away. The addition of UDPGal produced a dose-dependent inhibition of sperm/zona binding, and also dissociated preformed sperm/zona adhesions by catalyzing the release of the sperm GalTase from its GlcNAc substrate in the zona pellucida. Under identical conditions, UDP-glucose had no effect on sperm binding to the zona pellucida. The ability of UDPGal to dissociate sperm/zona adhesions was both time- and temperature-dependent. UDPGal produced nearly total inhibition of sperm/zona binding when the zonae pellucidae were first galactosylated to reduce the number of GalTase binding sites. Finally, monospecific anti-GalTase IgG and its Fab fragments produced a dose-dependent inhibition of sperm/zona binding and concomitantly blocked sperm GalTase catalytic activity. Preimmune IgG or anti-mouse brain IgG, which also binds to the sperm surface, had no effect. The sperm GalTase was localized by indirect immunofluorescence to a discrete plasma membrane domain on the dorsal surface of the anterior head overlying the intact acrosome. These results, along with earlier studies, show clearly that sperm GalTase serves as a principal gamete receptor during fertilization.  相似文献   

9.
Gamete recognition in the mouse is mediated, in part, by the binding of sperm surface galactosyltransferase (GalTase) to appropriate substrates in the egg zona pellucida. In this paper, sperm GalTase is shown to be an externally oriented, integral plasma membrane component. GalTase is not peripherally adsorbed to the cell surface, nor is it bound to cell surface glycoside substrates. GalTase can be released from the surface of intact sperm by either mild proteolysis or by detergent under conditions in which the sperm membranes remain intact as judged by double-label indirect immunofluorescence. Detergent-solubilized sperm GalTase has been purified to apparent homogeneity by affinity chromatography and characterized as a beta 1,4-GlcNAc:GalTase by substrate and kinetic analyses. Purified and membrane-bound GalTase both show an unusual thermal inactivation above 39-40 degrees C, whereas other sperm enzyme activities as well as GalTase activity from other cell types are temperature-dependent. Purified sperm GalTase inhibits sperm binding to the egg zona pellucida, consistent with its proposed role during gamete recognition.  相似文献   

10.
The presence and localization of actin was investigated in guinea pig spermatogenic cells and cauda epididymal sperm (CauE). Staining with rhodamine-phalloidin demonstrated the presence of actin filaments in the region of the developing acrosome in guinea pig spermatids. The actin filaments were visualized predominantly in the region of the inner acrosomal membrane in both round and elongating spermatids. As development progressed, the intensity of the staining diminished. No rhodamine-phalloidin staining was found in testicular sperm lacking a residual body or in CauE sperm. Analysis of actin levels by immunoblotting with an anti-actin monoclonal antibody showed that the disappearance of actin filaments is accompanied by a decrease in the level of actin per cell. By using immunoblotting techniques, actin was readily detected in preparations of purified spermatogenic cells, but not in preparations of purified CauE sperm. Actin was also not detected in cauda sperm by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) with anti-actin antibodies or examination of whole cell extracts by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

11.
Dichotomous spermatogenesis was examined in relation to diapause in the sweet potato hornworm, Agrius convolvuli. In non-diapause individuals, eupyrene metaphase began during the fifth larval instar and eupyrene spermatids appeared in wandering larvae. Bundles of mature sperm were found after pupation. Apyrene spermatocytes also appeared during the fifth larval instar, but meiotic divisions occurred irregularly and their nuclei were discarded from the cells during spermiogenesis. Morphometric analyses of flagellar axonemes showed a variable sperm number in apyrene bundles. The variation ranging from 125 to 256 sperm per bundle indicated abnormal divisions or the elimination of apyrene spermatocytes. In diapause-induced hornworms, spermatogenesis progressed similarly during the larval stages. The cessation of spermatogenesis during diapause is characterized by 1) secondary spermatocytes and sperm bundles degenerating gradually as the diapause period lengthens, and 2) spermatogonia or primary spermatocytes appearing throughout diapause. A TUNEL (TdT-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end-labeling) assay revealed that DNA fragmentation occurred in the nuclei of secondary spermatocytes and early spermatids. Aggregates of heterochromatin along the nuclear membrane indicated the onset of apoptosis, and condensed chromatin was confirmed by electron microscopy to be the apoptotic body. These results show that the degenerative changes in spermatogenic cells during pupal diapause were controlled by apoptosis.  相似文献   

12.
The functions of MAELSTROM protein (MAEL) in spermatogenesis are gradually being identified but the precise distribution of MAEL in spermatogenic cells during spermatogenesis has not yet been mapped. We studied the expression of MAEL in rat testis by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy (IEM). Immunofluorescence staining showed that MAEL was localized in intermitochondrial cement, irregularly-shaped perinuclear granules and satellite bodies of pachytene spermatocytes, and in chromatoid bodies of spermatids. The SBs appeared exclusively in pachytene spermatocytes at stages IX–X and were stained strongly for MAEL. In step 12–19 spermatids, many granules stained for MAEL but not DDX4. These granules were confirmed to be non-nuage structures, including mitochondria-associated granules, reticulated body, granulated body by IEM. In the neck region of late spermatids and sperm, MAEL-positive small granules were found. MAEL is colocalized with MIWI in nuage and non-nuage. The results suggest that MAEL seems to function in nuage and non-nuage structures and interacts with MIWI.  相似文献   

13.
We identified a rat sperm flagellar surface antigen using an IgG1 monoclonal antibody (MC31) against rat epididymal sperm. Avidin-biotin-peroxidase immunohistochemistry demonstrated that the antigen was first expressed in the cytoplasm of early primary spermatocytes, then gradually became restricted to the principal piece of the sperm flagellum during spermatogenesis. However, when the sperm reached the corpus epididymidis, the antigen was expressed on the surface of both the principal piece and the midpiece of the flagellum. The epithelial cells of the epididymis were not stained with MC31. Immunogold electron microscopy showed that the antigen was present on the surface of the sperm flagellar plasma membrane. Immunoblotting of Triton X-100 extracts of epididymal sperm after one-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) under nonreducing conditions demonstrated that MC31 detected a major antigen of 26,000-28,000 daltons (26-28K). Two-dimensional isoelectric focusing and SDS-PAGE indicated that the 26-28K antigen had an isoelectric focusing point (pl) of 5.8-5.3; minor antigens were also detected from 26K (pl 5.8) to 35K (pl 5.0). These results indicate that the antigen recognized by MC31 is an acidic 26-35K protein that originates in the testis, is integrated into the sperm flagellar plasma membrane of the principal piece during spermatogenesis, and then is expressed on the entire flagellar surface during epididymal transit.  相似文献   

14.
We have found that the rat testis contains a cell surface galactosyl receptor that is antigenically related to the minor species of rat liver asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGP-r) and has binding affinity for galactose coupled to agarose. In immunoblotting experiments, rat testis galactosyl receptor (RTG-r) is recognized by antiserum raised against the minor ASGP-r species of rat liver (designated rat hepatic lectin-2/3, RHL-2/3). Antiserum raised against the major species RHL-1 does not recognize an antigenic protein equivalent to RTG-r. Triton X-100-extracted rat liver and testes preparations fractionated by affinity chromatography on galactose-agarose and resolved by SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions, show that rat liver contains both the major (RHL-1) and minor (RHL-2/3) ASGP-r species whereas rat testis displays only a receptor species comigrating with RHL-2/3. RTG-r was present throughout testicular development. The receptor was found in seminiferous tubules, cultured Sertoli and spermatogenic cells, and epididymal sperm. Indirect immunofluorescent studies show RHL-2/3-like immunoreactivity on the surface of Sertoli cell, meiotic prophase spermatocytes, spermatids, and epididymal sperm. In spermatids and sperm, the immunoreactivity is restricted to the plasma membrane overlying the dorsal portion of the head. Because of RTG-r has galactose binding affinity, is present on surfaces of Sertoli and developing meiotic and postmeiotic spermatogenic cells, and overlies a region of the intact acrosome on epididymal sperm, RTG-r may have a role in spermatogenesis and in events leading to sperm-egg recognition.  相似文献   

15.
Cell surface antigens that appear in a defined temporal sequence during mouse spermatogenesis were previously detected serologically, but not identified biochemically, with four heterologous antibodies prepared against purified populations of pachytene spermatocytes (AP), round spermatids (ARS), vas deferens spermatozoa (AVDS), and mixed seminiferous cells (ASC) [Millette and Bellvé, J Cell Biol 74:86–97, 1977]. These antigens have now been identified immunochemically on nitrocellulose blots from SDS polyacrylamide gels. Three antisera (AP, ARS, and ASC) recognize a similar subset of determinants on one-dimensional immunoblots of germ cells and plasma membranes prepared from a mixed population of late spermatogenic cells. Comparisons of minor bands to reveal differences among these antisera. AVDS exhibits the least complex binding pattern. The results indicate that at least ten surface constituents appear during the pachytene stage of meiosis, coincident with a period of maximal RNA and protein synthesis [Monesi, Exp Cell Res 39:197–224, 1965]. Furthermore, two-dimensional immunoblot comparisons of plasma membranes isolated from pachytene spermatocytes and round spermatids reveal differences between surface determinants detectable at these two spermatogenic stages. For example, ASC recognizes two newly described proteins that are restricted to pachytene spermatocytes (? Mr 57,000, pI 6.45) and to round spermatids (? Mr 39,500, pI 4.85), respectively.  相似文献   

16.
The temporal expression of cell surface antigens during mammalian spermatogenesis has been investigated using isolated populations of mouse germ cells. Spermatogenic cells at advanced stages of differentiation, including pachytene primary spermatocytes, round spermatids, and residual bodies of Regaud and mature spermatozoa, contain common antigenic membrane components which are not detected before the pachytene stage of the first meiotic prophase. These surface constituents are not detected on isolated populations of primitive type A spermatogonia, type A spermatogonia, type B spermatogonia, preleptotene primary spermatocytes, or leptotene and zygotene primary spermatocytes. These results have been demonstrated by immunofluorescence microscopy, by complement-mediated cytotoxicity, and by quantitative measurements of immunoglobulin (Ig) receptors on the plasma membrane of all cell populations examined. The cell surface antigens detected on germ cells are not found on mouse thymocytes, erythrocytes, or peripheral blood lymphocytes as determined by immunofluorescence and by cytotoxicity assays. Furthermore, absorption of antisera with kidney and liver tissue does not reduce the reactivity of the antibody preparations with spermatogenic cells, indicating that these antigenic determinants are specific to germ cells. This represents the first direct evidence for the ordered temporal appearance of plasma membrane antigens specific to particular classes of mouse spermatogenic cells. It appears that at late meiotic prophase, coincident with the production of pachytene primary spermatocytes, a variety of new components are inserted into the surface membranes of developing germ cells. The further identification and biochemical characterization of these constituents should facilitate an understanding of mammalian spermatogenesis at the molecular level.  相似文献   

17.
Zhang L  Han XK  Qi YY  Liu Y  Chen QS 《Theriogenology》2008,69(9):1148-1158
To elucidate the processes involved in the spatial and temporal maturation of spermatogenic cells in the testes of the soft-shelled turtle, Pelodiscus sinensis, we used a histological morphology method, TdT-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL) assay, the proliferating-cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), and electron microscopy. Seminiferous tubules from 100 turtles, normal for size of testes and semen quality, were collected during 10 months of a complete annual cycle (10 turtles/month). The seminiferous epithelium was spermatogenically active through the summer and fall, but quiescent throughout the rest of the year; germ cells progressed through spermatogenesis in a temporal rather than a spatial pattern, resulting in a single spermatogenic event that climaxed with one massive sperm release in November. The TUNEL method detected few apoptotic cells in spermatogenic testis, with much larger numbers during the spermatogenically quiescent phase. Spermatocytes were the most common germ cell types labeled by the TUNEL assay (a few spermatogonia were also labeled). Apoptotic spermatocytes had membrane blebbing and chromatin condensation during the resting phase, but not during active spermatogenesis. We inferred that accelerated apoptosis of spermatogonia and spermatocytes partly accounted for germ cell loss during the nonspermatogenic phase. The PCNA was expressed in nuclei of spermatogonia and primary spermatocytes during the spermatogenically active phase. During the regressive phase, PCNA-positive cells also included spermatogonia and spermatocytes, but the number of positive spermatocytes was less than that during the spermatogenically active phase. We concluded that seasonal variations in spermatogenesis in the soft-shelled turtle were both stage- and process-specific.  相似文献   

18.
Spermatozoa released from the seminiferous tubules are terminally differentiated cells with no known synthetic activity. Their components are synthesized in the spermatogenic cells during spermatogenesis. In this study, we report the characterization and immunolocalization of beta-glucuronidase in mouse testicular germ cells and spermatozoa. The enzyme is an exoglycohydrolase with dual localization, being present in lysosomes and endoplasmic reticulum of several mouse and rat tissues. The purified germ cell preparations (spermatocytes, round spermatids, and condensed/elongated spermatids) when assayed for beta-glucuronidase activity showed that the spermatocytes contained five times more enzyme activity per cell than the spermatids. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, carried out under native and denaturing conditions, demonstrated that the germ cells express only the lysosomal form of the enzyme (pI 5.5-6.0) with a subunit molecular mass of 74 kDa. Immunocytochemical studies revealed a positive reaction in the Golgi membranes, Golgi-associated vesicles, and lysosomes of late spermatocytes (pachytene spermatocytes) and a stage-specific localization during spermiogenesis. The forming or formed acrosome of the elongated spermatids (stages 9-16) and epididymal spermatozoa was highly immunopositive. Comparison of immunoprecipitation curves and kinetic properties of the enzyme present in spermatocytes and spermatozoa revealed no major differences. Taken together, our results demonstrate that beta-glucuronidase activities present in the lysosomes of spermatocytes and the sperm acrosome are kinetically and immunologically similar.  相似文献   

19.
Using the indirect immunofluorescence staining technique, the occurrence and localization of proacrosin, the zymogen form of acrosin, was studied during spermatogenesis in the bull, ram, boar and rabbit. Proacrosin staining was demonstrable for the first time in the early haploid spermatid and increased with the differentiation of the spermatid to spermatozoon. The spermatozoon is covered by a cap-like structure of uniform fluorescence corresponding to the acrosomal compartment of the male gamete. No fluorescence could be found in diploid spermatogenic cells, i.e., in spermatogonia and spermatocytes. An identical developmental pattern of proacrosin was observed with the indirect immunoperoxidase staining technique. However, with this staining technique a distinct distribution of proacrosin staining was observed in the acrosome of epididymal and ejaculated spermatozoa of the bull, ram, boar, rabbit and man. Proacrosin seems to be distributed in the acrosome in granules rather than in the homogeneous form, as was indicated by the results of indirect immunofluorescence staining.  相似文献   

20.
Sperm antigens that appear during spermatogenesis in the baboon were identified by using three monoclonal antibodies generated in culture from mice immunized with baboon caudal epididymal spermatozoa. Antibodies BSA1 and BSA2 recognize trypsin-sensitive 84,000 and 45,000 dalton determinants that are restricted to the tail and anterior acrosomal regions of the sperm, respectively, as determined by Western blot and immunofluorescence techniques. The tail antigen absent in 2- and 3-yr-old baboon testes first appears in spermatid cells at about 4 yr of age. In contrast, the acrosomal antigen recognized by BSA2 is present in 3-yr-old primitive testicular germ cells. In the mature testis, the 45,000 molecular weight determinant is predominantly localized in the nucleus of late pachytene spermatocytes and round spermatid cells as observed via the avidinbiotin immunoperoxidase method. Antibody BSA3 reacted only with sailidase-treated sections of adult testis. This trypsin-resistant determinant, not expressed on testicular sperm, is recognized by antibody BSA3 only on epididymal sperm, thus indicating a post-testicular sperm modification.  相似文献   

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