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1.
Biochemical and immunoelectron microscopic methods have been used to analyze the distribution of actin in boar spermatozoa and its state of aggregation before and after acrosome reaction. F-actin was detected on sperm head and tail by electron microscopy using an improved phalloidin probe: incubation with a fluorescein-phalloidin complex and an anti-fluorescein antibody, followed by labeling with protein A-gold complex. Gold particles, indicating the presence of F-actin, were localized on the sperm surface of the acrosome-reacted spermatozoa. Specific labeling was localized (1) between the outer acrosomal membrane and the plasma membrane in the equatorial region, (2) between the outer surface of the fibrous sheath and the plasma membrane in the postacrosomal region, (3) around the connecting piece and the neck region, and (4) on the external surface of the fibrous sheath in the principal piece of the tail. Furthermore, after NP-40 extraction, the SDS-PAGE revealed a difference in solubility between reacted and unreacted boar spermatozoa, reflecting actin polymerization. We conclude that most actin in the acrosome reacted boar spermatozoa is polymeric.  相似文献   

2.
Actin was localized in testicular spermatids and in ionophore-treated ejaculated sperm of boar by use of a monoclonal anti-actin antibody labeled with colloidal gold. With the on-grid postembedding immunostaining of Lowicryl K4M sections, actin was identified in the subacrosomal region of differentiating spermatids, in the microfilaments of the surrounding Sertoli cells, and in the myoid cells of the tubular wall. Ejaculated sperm, labeled with the preembedding method, showed actin between the plasma membrane and the outer acrosomal membrane of the equatorial segment. Indirect immunofluorescence was positive in the equatorial segment and in the acrosomal cap of intact sperm, whereas reacted sperm at the anterior head region retained fluorescence only in the inner acrosomal membrane. Rhodamine-phalloidin failed to stain intact and reacted sperm. The distribution of actin in sperm head membranes (inner acrosomal membrane, membranes of the equatorial segment), which are retained after the acrosome reaction, is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Three staining procedures to detect sperm acrosome integrity were compared via electron microscopy. Stains were applied to epididymal, freshly ejaculated, in vivo capacitated, and sonicated sperm cells in addition to spermatozoa displaying sequentially removed plasma and outer and inner acrosomal membranes. Sequential membrane removal procedures resulted in removal of plasma membranes from 73% of all sperm cells, removal of plasma and outer acrosomal membranes from 74% of all sperm cells, and removal of plasma and outer and inner acrosomal membranes from 87% of all sperm cells as determined by electron microscopy. Live/dead staining results were not statistically different from subjective microscopic motility evaluations (P less than 0.005) for epididymal, sonicated, freshly ejaculated, and in vivo capacitated sperm samples. All three stains assessed were similarly capable of detecting the acrosome status of freshly ejaculated and of sonicated spermatozoa compared to data obtained by electron microscopy (P = 0.010). However, only the Bryan-Akruk stain afforded data that were closely correlated with data obtained via electron microscopy for all sperm types assessed; the latter included in vivo capacitated spermatozoa and sperm cells rendered free of plasma membranes. Results confirmed an earlier report by successfully effecting sequential removal of rabbit acrosomal membranes and documented use of the Bryan-Akruk acrosomal stain for evaluation of sperm cell populations for fertilizing ability. These findings should prove useful in further investigations of mechanisms involved in achievement of fertilizing ability by rabbit spermatozoa.  相似文献   

4.
The plasma membranes from ejaculated human spermatozoa were removed by nitrogen cavitation (600 PSI for 10 min) and isolated by centrifugation followed by a discontinuous sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Glycolipid analysis of the plasma membrane revealed a three-fold enrichment in gangliosides: GM3 and GD1a/GD1b and neutral glycolipids: globoside and sulfatide as compared to that of whole human sperm. Two dimensional electrophoresis of human sperm plasma membranes revealed about 75 polypeptides. Several of these polypeptides were similar in migration and in display of shape and color to that found in boar sperm plasma membranes.  相似文献   

5.
The distribution of actin in hamster sperm cells was studied during spermiogenesis, epididymal transit, in vitro capacitation and acrosome reaction by immunogold procedures using a polyclonal and two monoclonal antiactin antibodies. A predominant actin labeling (F-actin) was detected in the subacrosomal space of spermatids. Actin labeling was also observed under the plasma membrane of intercellular bridges and along the outer acrosomal membrane. In late spermatids there was both F-actin depolymerization and a loss of actin immunolabeling, thus suggesting a dispersion of G-actin monomers. No obvious labeling was evidenced in residual bodies. This pattern was observed with the three antiactin probes. In contrast, an actin labeling reappeared over the fibrous sheath of the flagellum in epididymal spermatozoa but only when the polyclonal antibody was used. Only one single actin reactive band was detected by immunoblotting of sperm extracts. Since the sperm tails were NBD phallacidin negative they were considered to contain either G-actin or actin oligomers rather than bundles of actin filaments. It is suggested that G-actin originating in the head of late spermatids was redistributed to the flagellum of epidymal spermatozoa. No further changes were noted after capacitation and acrosome reaction thus indicating no apparent effect on actin polymerization and distribution.  相似文献   

6.
Trifluoperazine, N-6-aminohexyl-5-chloro-1-naphthalene sulfonamide (W7), and calmidazolium are known to be calmodulin inhibitors and cell membrane soluble substances. In mammalian spermatozoa, calmodulin is present and is retained to mediate several sperm processes, such as sperm activation, sperm-egg fusion, microtubule disassembly, etc. We examined the effects of anticalmodulin drugs on the ultrastructure of freshly ejaculated boar spermatozoa. Whereas all the drugs, at the low concentrations tested, appear to prevent acrosomal alterations, at higher concentrations, they induced these alterations. Unexpectedly, the outer acrosomal membrane appeared to be more sensitive to the drugs than the plasma membrane; vesicles formed within the acrosome from the outer acrosomal membrane even when plasma membrane maintained its structural integrity. These findings were confirmed by the analysis carried out by fluorescent light microscopy by utilizing fluoresceinated Ricinus communis agglutinins to specifically stain the acrosomes.  相似文献   

7.
Microfilaments appear in boar spermatozoa during capacitation in vitro   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Boar spermatozoa were incubated in a capacitation medium and examined for the presence of filamentous actin by using the fluorescent probe NBD-phallacidin. F-actin was not observed in uncapacitated sperm, but developed in most regions of the cell during the capacitation period. Fluorescent staining was most intense in the flagellum. When fresh seminal plasma was added to capacitated sperm and the sperm was further incubated, F-actin was no longer observed. In view of previous experiments which indicated that plasma membrane proteins (PMPs), including a major integral PMP, move out of the sperm head into the flagellum during capacitation and that this movement is inhibited by the microfilament poison cytochalasin D (Peterson, Saxena, Saxena, and Russell: Biol. Reprod., in press, '86), we suggest that actin-PMP interactions play a major role in capacitating boar spermatozoa.  相似文献   

8.
Ash KL  Berger T  Horner CM  Famula TR 《Theriogenology》1994,42(7):1217-1226
This study was designed to compare differences among porcine sperm plasma membrane proteins with the ability of spermatozoa to interact with zona-free hamster ova. Sperm plasma membrane vesicles were recovered from 24 ejaculates from 10 fertile boars, and from cauda epididymal spermatozoa from 3 fertile and 1 very subfertile boar. Solubilized sperm plasma membrane proteins were run on 1D SDS-PAGE gels, transferred to western blots, stained, and analyzed for quantity of protein per band by scanning laser densitometry. Variation in the quantities of individual sperm plasma membrane proteins in the 20 identified bands were statistically compared with the ability of spermatozoa from the same ejaculate to penetrate zona-free hamster ova. The percentages of plasma membrane protein present in 3 bands (90, 84 and 60 kD) were positively correlated with the ability of spermatozoa from the same ejaculate to fuse with zona-free hamster ova (P = 0.002, 0.01, 0.04; R = 0.53, 0.40, 0.38, respectively). The quantities of protein in 2 other bands (69 and 35 kD) were significantly but negatively correlated with the results of the zona-free hamster ova bioassay (P = 0.02, 0.01; R = -0.42, -0.37, respectively). The sperm plasma membrane profiles were quantitatively similar between the ejaculated samples and the fertile epididymal samples. Six epididymal sperm plasma membrane proteins were present in statistically different quantities in the subfertile boar sample and the 3 fertile controls. The 90 kD band positively correlated with the hamster ova bioassay in the ejaculated samples was not detected in the subfertile epididymal sperm plasma membrane sample. These results suggest that protein(s) in one or more of the 3 positively correlated ejaculated sperm plasma membrane protein bands may be involved in sperm-oocyte interaction.  相似文献   

9.
Modifications in rabbit sperm plasma membranes during epididymal passage and after ejaculation were investigated by used of three lectins: concanavalin A (Con A); Ricinus communis I (RCA(I)); and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). During sperm passage from caput to cauda epididymis, agglutination by WGA drastically decreased, and agglutination by RCA(I) slightly decreased, although agglutination by Con A remained approximately unchanged. After ejaculation, spermatozoa were agglutinated to a similar degree or slightly less by Con A, WGA, and RCA(I), compared to cauda epididymal spermatozoa. Ultrastructural examination of sperm lectin-binding sites with ferritin- lectin conjugates revealed differences in the densities of lectin receptors in various sperm regions, and changes in the same regions during epididymal passage and after ejaculation. Ferritin-RCA(I) showed abrupt changes in lectin site densities between acrosomal and postacrosomal regions of sperm heads. The relative amounts of ferritin-RCA(I) bound to heads of caput epididymal or ejaculated spermatozoa. Tail regions were labeled by ferritin RCA(I) almost equally on caput and cauda epididymal spermatozoa, but the middle-piece region of ejaculated spermatozoa was slightly more densely labeled than the principal-piece region, and these two regions on ejaculated spermatozoa were labeled less than on caput and cuada epididymal spermatozoa. Ferritin-WGA densely labeled the acrosomal region of caput epididymal spermatozoa, although labeling of cauda epidiymal spermatozoa was relatively sparse except in the apical area of the acrosomal region. Ejaculated spermatozoa bound only a few molecules of ferritin-WGA, even at the highest conjugate concentrations used. Caput epididymal, but not cauda epididymal or ejaculated spermatozoa, bound ferritin-WGA in the tail regions. Dramatic differences in labeling densities during epididymal passage and after ejaculation were not found with ferritin-Con A.  相似文献   

10.
Mammalian spermatozoa acquire functionality during epididymal maturation, and the ability to penetrate and fertilize the oocyte during capacitation. The aim of this study was to assess the effects of epididymal maturation, ejaculation and in vitro capacitation on sperm viability, acrosome integrity, mitochondrial activity, membrane fluidity, and calcium influx, both as indicators of capacitation status and sperm motility. Results indicated that boar spermatozoa acquired the ability to move in the epididymal corpus; however, their motility was not linear until the ejaculation. Epididymal spermatozoa showed low membrane fluidity and intracellular calcium content; ejaculation led to an increased calcium content, while membrane fluidity showed no changes. Acrosome integrity remained constant throughout the epididymal duct and after ejaculation and in vitro capacitation. The frequency of viable spermatozoa with intact mitochondrial sheath was higher in caput and ejaculated samples than in corpus and cauda samples, whereas the frequency of spermatozoa with high membrane potential was significantly lower in cauda samples. In vitro capacitation resulted in a decreased frequency of viable spermatozoa with intact mitochondrial sheath and an increased frequency of spermatozoa with high membrane potential in ejaculated samples. These results indicated that both epididymal maturation and ejaculation are key events for further capacitation, because only ejaculated spermatozoa are capable of undergoing the set of changes leading to capacitation.  相似文献   

11.
Plasma membranes isolated from cauda epididymal and ejaculated boar sperm were inserted into planar lipid bilayers and examined for the presence of ion channels. Channel fusion was frequently observed; the most prominent was a nonselective cation channel which conducted K, Na, Cs, Ca, and Ba. Channel opening did not show a strict dependence on voltage but was partially blocked by verapamil, nitrendipine, and ruthenium red. A channel with these characteristics was observed when plasma membranes were isolated by high-pressure nitrogen cavitation (650 psi, 78% sperm head plasma membranes) or at very low nitrogen pressures (50 psi, 90% sperm head plasma membranes), suggesting that this channel may be present in the plasma membrane overlying the sperm head.  相似文献   

12.
The acrosomal reaction (AR) is a regulated sperm exocytotic process that involves fusion of the plasma membrane (PM) with the outer acrosomal membrane (OAM). Our group has described F-actin cytoskeletons associated to these membranes. It has been proposed that in regulated exocytosis, a cortical cytoskeleton acts as a barrier that obstructs membrane fusion, and must be disassembled for exocytosis to occur. Actin-severing proteins from the gelsolin family have been considered to break this barrier. The present study attempted to determine if gelsolin has a function in guinea pig sperm capacitation and AR. By indirect immunofluorescence (IIF), gelsolin was detected in the apical and postacrosomal regions of the head and in the flagellum in both capacitated and non-capacitated guinea pig spermatozoa. By Western blotting, gelsolin was detected in isolated PM and OAM of non-capacitated spermatozoa. Gelsolin and actin were detected in a mixture of PM-OAM obtained by sonication, and both proteins were absent in membranes of capacitated spermatozoa. Inhibition of three different pathways of PIP2 hydrolysis during capacitation did not cancel gelsolin loss from membranes. Gelsolin was detected by Western blotting associated to membrane cytoskeletons obtained after phalloidin F-actin stabilization and Triton-X treatment; additionally, by immunoprecipitation, it was shown that gelsolin is associated with actin. By electron microscopy we observed that skeletons disassemble during capacitation, but phalloidin prevents disassembly. A three-dimensional skeleton was observed that apparently joins PM with OAM. Exogenous gelsolin stimulates AR assayed in a permeabilized spermatozoa model. Results suggest that gelsolin disassembles F-actin cytoskeletons during capacitation, promoting AR.  相似文献   

13.
The highly selective fluorescent Ca2+ indicator 'quin 2' has been loaded into ram and boar spermatozoa as the acetoxymethyl ester, 'quin 2/AM', which is hydrolysed and trapped in the cytoplasm. Loadings of several mM were not toxic to spermatozoa as judged by motility. Fluorescence measurements (mean +/- S.E.M.) indicated a normal cytoplasmic free-calcium concentration, [Ca2+]i, of 193 nM +/- 0.2 (n = 10) for ejaculated ram sperm, 175 nM +/- 3.9 (n = 10) for cauda epididymal boar sperm and 105 nM +/- 10 (n = 10) for the caput sperm. After cold shock ejaculated ram and cauda epididymal boar sperm did not retain quin 2, due presumably to structural damage. However, cold shocked caput boar sperm could be readily loaded with quin 2 and had a [Ca2+]i similar to control sperm. Sodium azide, propranolol and caffeine did not affect the [Ca2+]i of ram and boar sperm, however theophylline, dibutyryl c-AMP and La3+ significantly reduced it. The inhibitors rotenone and antimycin A, and the uncouplers 2,4-DNP and CCCP caused a transient elevation of [Ca2+]i, most likely resulting from release of mitochondrial calcium. The increased [Ca2+]i following addition of the ionophore A23187, was highly pH dependent in ram spermatozoa and it was critical to increase the pH of the medium above 7.5; the increase in [Ca2+]i was apparently not dependent on the oxidative metabolism of the sperm as addition of the uncouplers 2,4-DNP and CCCP had no effect on [Ca2+ )i. Addition of filipin to ram and boar sperm resulted in a large increase in [Ca2+]i but addition of filipin to ionophore-treated sperm caused [Ca2+]i to fall well below control levels.  相似文献   

14.
The localization of proacrosin was determined by using colloidal gold labeling and electron microscopy of boar germ cells during spermiogenesis to post-ejaculation. Proacrosin was first localized in round spermatids during the Golgi phase of spermiogenesis; it was associated with the electron-dense granule, or acrosomal granule that was conspicuous within the acrosome. It remained within the acrosomal granule during the cap and acrosome phases of spermiogenesis. At these stages, there was no apparent association of the proacrosin molecule with the acrosomal membranes. During the maturation phase of spermiogenesis, proacrosin was seen to become dispersed into all regions of the acrosome except the equatorial segment. When sperm from different segments of the epididymis and ejaculated sperm were examined, localization was observed throughout the acrosome except for the equatorial segment. Here proacrosin appeared to be localized on both the inner and outer acrosomal membranes as well as with the acrosomal matrix, although further studies are required to verify the membrane localization. No labeling was seen on the plasma membrane. These data suggest that the synthesis and movement of proacrosin to sites in the acrosome are controlled by an as yet unknown process. The absence of proacrosin on the plasma membrane of mature ejaculated sperm makes it unlikely that this enzyme plays a role in sperm-zona adhesion prior to capacitation.  相似文献   

15.
Actin in the sperm head of Talpa europaea was observed by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. The indirect immunofluorescence technique, using both anti-actin and DNase anti-DNase methods, showed a shining fluorescent band around the sperm head in some spermatozoa, whereas in others the fluorescence was found in the postacrosomal region. Since no labeling was detected in sperms treated with NBD-phallacidin, it is likely that mature mole sperms contain G-actin but not F-actin. The results of electron microscopy indicated the deposition of the anti-actin antibodies in two places in mole spermatozoa: the postacrosomal region and the nuclear segment of the acrosome. In the first case, the actin was localized in the space between the outer surface of the postacrosomal sheath and the plasma membrane; in the second one, the actin was localized in the space between the outer acrosomal membrane and the plasma membrane. The significance of the presence of actin and its role(s) during fertilization are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The aggregational state of actin in boar spermatozoa after capacitation and the acrosome reaction has been examined by several methods. In vitro fertilization (IVF) experiments were conducted in the presence and absence of cytochalasin D (CD) to evaluate the role of actin polymerization in the events of fertilization. The fertilizing capacity was very high in controls, but, when CD (an inhibitor of the polymerization of actin) was added to the capacitation medium, there was a marked decrease in the fertilizing capacity of the boar spermatozoa. There was a further decrease when CD was present during both capacitation and fertilization processes. In addition to the IVF tests, biochemical and immunoelectron microscopic methods were used to analyze the state of aggregation of actin in boar spermatozoa after capacitation, and the acrosome reaction. By immunoelectron microscopy with a phalloidin probe, there were no gold particles, indicating the presence of F-actin on boar sperm heads capacitated and acrosome-reacted in media containing CD. By sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis there were differences in NP-40 solubility, reflecting actin polymerization, between CD-treated and untreated sperm. These results suggest that actin polymerizes during capacitation and the acrosome reaction and that this polymerization is essential to the fertilization process. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Monoclonal antibodies specific for three major plasma membrane (PM) proteins, previously referenced as PM protein 2.0, 4.85 and 5.0, and one specific for an unreferenced PM protein (Mr 80,000) were used with indirect fluorescence microscopy to detect the effects of capacitation on the localization of these PM proteins. In ejaculated or cauda spermatozoa, incubation in the capacitating medium caused the appearance of fluorescence in the flagellum and either a loss of fluorescence on the PM overlying the sperm head (PM proteins of 5.0 and Mr 80,000) or a delocalization of fluorescence on the head PM (PM proteins 2.0 and 4.85). Labelling spermatozoa with divalent antibody and then capacitating them indicated the PM protein 5.0 and that of Mr 80,000 migrated out of the head plasma membrane into the flagellar PM during capacitation. These antigens re-entered the head PM when fresh seminal plasma was added after the capacitation period or when energy metabolism was inhibited by azide. Cytochalasin D, an inhibitor of the polymerization of actin, prevented movement of PM protein 5.0 and that of Mr 80,000 of the head PM into the flagellum during incubation in the capacitation medium and prevented re-entry of these antigens from the flagellum into the head PM after incubation in this medium. Localization changes occurring with capacitation were time-dependent but independent of the method of preparing samples for microscopy. For the major PM proteins 4.85 and 5.0, a much smaller percentage of caput spermatozoa (approximately 20%) showed specific localization changes compared to those of the cauda (approximately 80%). Chelation of Ca2+ inhibited these changes in ejaculated spermatozoa and fresh seminal plasma, added to capacitated spermatozoa, restored the localization pattern characteristic of uncapacitated spermatozoa. These observations suggest that the organization of major proteins in the plasma membrane overlying the sperm head is altered during capacitation. These changes are reversible, are dependent on sperm maturation and also appear to involve actin filament interactions with the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Intracellular, loosely bound Ca++ has been localized electron microscopically in freshly ejaculated boar spermatozoa by in situ precipitation with potassium antimonate. Ca++ was identified as the cation precipitated by testing the EGTA-sensitivity of the precipitates and by X-ray microprobe analysis. The data obtained revealed that the outer acrosomal membrane is the preferential site for Ca++ precipitation in the sperm head.  相似文献   

19.
Summary In order to study the acrosome reaction in boar, spermatozoa were incubated in a calcium-containing medium in the presence of the calcium ionophore A23187. The time course of the acrosome reaction was assessed by phasecontrast microscopy and correlated with the movement characteristics of the spermatozoa determined by means of multiple-exposure photography (MEP). Different stages of the acrosome reaction could be observed by indirect immunofluorescence using an antibody fraction raised in rabbits against the isolated outer acrosomal membrane (OAM). At the start of the acrosome reaction, a bright fluorescence located exclusively at the acrosomal cap of the sperm head could be observed, whereas after 60–120 min, the fluorescence vanished, indicating the complete loss of the OAM. However, to gain more insight into the stages of the plasma membrane and OAM during the acrosome reaction, immunoelectron-microscopical studies were performed using anti-OAM antibodies detected by the protein-A gold method. Ultrathin sections and total preparations in combination with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) confirmed, that boar spermatozoa start their acrosome reaction by a vesiculation of the plasma membrane, thus exposing the heavily labelled OAM, which is then lost as sheets or large vesicles. The newly exposed inner acrosomal membrane did not show any labelling with gold, thereby indicating clear differences in the antigenicity of both acrosomal membranes.  相似文献   

20.
In order to study the acrosome reaction in boar, spermatozoa were incubated in a calcium-containing medium in the presence of the calcium ionophore A23187. The time course of the acrosome reaction was assessed by phase-contrast microscopy and correlated with the movement characteristics of the spermatozoa determined by means of multiple-exposure photography (MEP). Different stages of the acrosome reaction could be observed by indirect immunofluorescence using an antibody fraction raised in rabbits against the isolated outer acrosomal membrane (OAM). At the start of the acrosome reaction, a bright fluorescence located exclusively at the acrosomal cap of the sperm head could be observed, whereas after 60-120 min, the fluorescence vanished, indicating the complete loss of the OAM. However, to gain more insight into the stages of the plasma membrane and OAM during the acrosome reaction, immunoelectron-microscopical studies were performed using anti-OAM antibodies detected by the protein-A gold method. Ultrathin sections and total preparations in combination with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) confirmed, that boar spermatozoa start their acrosome reaction by a vesiculation of the plasma membrane, thus exposing the heavily labelled OAM, which is then lost as sheets or large vesicles. The newly exposed inner acrosomal membrane did not show any labelling with gold, thereby indicating clear differences in the antigenicity of both acrosomal membranes.  相似文献   

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