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1.
The effects of Ca2+ channel antagonists on the motility and acrosome reaction of guinea pig spermatozoa were examined by incubating the spermatozoa continuously in Ca2+-containing capacitating media with 10?6 M to 10?4 M antagonist. Antagonists tested were four voltage-gated Ca2+ channel antagonists (verapamil, nifedipine, nimodipine, and FR–34235) and two ligand-gated channel antagonists (NaNO2 and Na-nitroprusside). None of these antagonists could block the acrosome reaction. Instead, three antagonists (verapamil, nimodipine, and FR-34235, each at 10?4 M) accelerated the onset of the acrosome reaction with a subsequent decrease in sperm motility. Nifedipine and Na-nitroprusside at the same concentration caused a complete loss of sperm motility by 4 hr of incubation with no substantial effect on the rate of acrosome reaction. The detrimental effect of antagonists on the motility of spermatozoa appears to be due to a direct, Ca2+-independent, membrane-perturbing action of the reagents. The acrosome reaction was not inhibited when guinea pig spermatozoa were precapacitated in Ca2+-free medium (with a low concentration of lysolecithin) in the continuous presence of antagonists. An acceleration of the onset of the acrosome reaction by verapamil (10?4 M) was also demonstrated in the golden hamster. These results may be interpreted as indicating that the entry of extracellular Ca2+ into spermatozoa, which triggers the acrosome reaction of guinea pig and hamster spermatozoa, is not mediated by Ca2+ channels. This is in marked contrast with the case reported in invertebrate spermatozoa. Possible mechanisms by which some of the antagonists stimulate the acrosome reaction and affect the motility of mammalian spermatozoa are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of lipids on the survival, acrosome reaction, and fertilizing capacity of guinea pig spermatozoa were studied by incubating the spermatozoa in media containing various concentrations of the lipids. Lipids tested were: phosphatidyl-choline (PC), -ethanolamine (PE), -inositol (PI), -serine (PS), sphingomyelin (S), cholesterol (C), lysophosphatidyl-choline (LC), -ethanolamine (LE), -inositol (LI), -serine (LS), and glyceryl monooleate (M). When spermatozoa were incubated in a regular medium (containing 2 mM Ca2+) with M, the majority underwent the acrosome reaction within 1 hour. None of the other lipids were as effective as M, and some were totally ineffective under the same conditions. However, when spermatozoa were preincubated in Ca2+-free medium containing LC, LE, or LI, they gained the ability to undergo the acrosome reaction. One hour of preincubation in Ca2+-free medium with LC, LE, or LI was enough to render the vast majority of spermatozoa capable of undergoing the acrosome reaction in response to Ca2+. The optimum concentrations for LC, LE, and LI were approximately 85 μg/ml, 210 μg/ml, and 140 μg/ml, respectively. Spermatozoa that had undergone the acrosome reaction by pretreatment with LC, LE, or LI remained actively motile and were capable of fertilizing eggs. LS was totally ineffective in rendering the spermatozoa capable of undergoing the acrosome reaction, and in fact it inhibited the acrosome reaction by itself and also inhibited the LC-, LE-, or LI-mediated acrosome reaction. LS did not prevent acrosome-reacted spermatozoa from penetrating the zona pellucida, but did prevent sperm-egg fusion. Based on these findings, it is suggested that lysophospholipids are intricately involved in the sperm acrosome reaction and perhaps in sperm-egg fusion.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of the calmodulin antagonist W-7 on the capacitation and the acrosome reaction of guinea pig spermatozoa was examined. The characteristic features of the acrosome reaction induced by W-7 were the dependence on the composition and pH of the medium and on the presence of sodium bicarbonate. The most effective concentration of W-7 for inducing the acrosome reaction was approximately 5 μM, which is far less than the Kd for calmodulin. Moreover, W-7 enhanced the ability of spermatozoa to acquire capacitation in a Ca2+-free medium. The spermatozoa induced to undergo the acrosome reaction by W-7 were capable of penetrating the zona-free hamster eggs. W-5, which has a lower affinity for calmodulin than W-7, also induced the acrosome reaction in the same manner as W-7. These results suggest that the naphthalenesulfonamide derivatives W-7 and W-5 can induce the acrosome reaction in guinea pig spermatozoa via capacitation in a pH-dependent, Ca2+-calmodulin-independent manner.  相似文献   

4.
Signal transduction pathways in guinea pig sperm   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Trifluoperazine (TFP), the antagonist of calmodulin (CaM). significantly stimulated the capacitation and acrosome reaction of guinea pig spermatozoa at the concentration of 10-100μmol/L, independent of the external Ca2+. Forskolin, dbcAMP and caffeine evidently promoted the occurrence of acrosome reaction of spermatozoa at early capacitation stage (5 h) in nonsynchronous system but not in synchronous system. If the spermatozoa were capacitated for 15 h in synchronous system, the above three drugs significantly stimulated acrosome reaction in a Ca2+-independent manner. Protein kinase C activators, i.e. phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDB) did not influence the occurrence of acrosome reaction of spermatozoa at early capacitation stage, but significantly increased the acrosome reaction rate in capacitated spermatozoa in a Ca2+-independent manner. In contrast. PKC inhibitor staurosporine significantly inhibited the occurrence of acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

5.
Annexins are a family of Ca2+-binding proteins involved in the exocytotic process. The presence and the role of annexins in mammalian spermatozoa have not been well established. Two annexin-like proteins were obtained from guinea pig testis, a doublet of Mr 31–33 kD (p31/33) and a protein of Mr 50 kD (p50). Both proteins were able to bind to erythrocyte ghosts in a Ca2+-dependent fashion. Polyclonal antibodies against p31/33 reacted with two major proteins, Mrs 50 kD (sp50) and 42 kD (sp42), from mature and immature guinea pig spermatozoa. p50 and sp50 are likely the native proteins from testis and spermatozoa, respectively, and they are seemingly related. By immunofluorescence, sp50 was only found in the apical acrosome region of immature and capacitated and noncapacitated spermatozoa, and its location was intracellular. In spermatozoa undergoing acrosome reaction, sp50 was detected in the whole acrosome, while in spermatozoa that had undergone acrosome reaction sp50 was not detected. However, in the protein pattern of acrosome reaction vesicles, anti-p31/33 antibody revealed diffuse bands of Mr 35–38 kD. sp50 was able to bind to plasma membrane fragments and acrosome outer membrane from demembranated sperm in a Ca2+-dependent fashion. The presence of sp50 in the acrosome region, its distribution throughout the acrosome membrane just before the acrosome reaction, and its ability to bind both plasma and outer acrosome membranes in a Ca2+-dependent manner suggest that sp50 may participate in the acrosome reaction mechanism in guinea pig spermatozoa. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
The majority of the spermatozoa precapacitated in Ca2+-free medium underwent the acrosome raction rapidly when they were transferred to Ca2+-containing medium. The presence of Na+ and Ca2+ in the medium was essential for the acrosome reaction. The vast majority of spermatozoa failed to undergo the reaction in Ca2+ medium lacking monovalent ions, although they remained motile. At the concentration of 140 mM, Na+, K+, Rb+, and Cs+ all supported the reaction at the maximum level, but at 50 mM the latter three ions were not as effective as Na+. Li+ was least effective in supporting the reaction. Virtually no acrosome reactions took place when precapacitated spermatozoa were first exposed to Na+ medium (no Ca2+) and then to Ca2+ medium (no Na+). On the other hand, a considerably higher proportion of spermatozoa acrosome reacted when they were exposed to these media in the reverse order. The most efficient acrosome reactions took place when the medium contained both a monovalent ion (Na+) and Ca2+ simultaneously. Possible mechanisms by which monovalent and divalent cations participate in the acrosome reaction are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
After capacitation of guinea pig spermatozoa in vitro, the plasma membrane was mechanically separated from the spermatozoa in the presence or absence of HgCl2 and subsequently isolated by density gradient centrifugation. Examination of the spermatozoa by electron microscopy after homogenization in the presence of HgCl2 revealed that plasma membrane was removed only from the acrosomal region and remained predominately intact posterior to the equatorial segment of the sperm head, as well as the midpiece and tail. In comparison, spermatozoa homogenized under similar buffer conditions but in the absence of HgCl2 lose the large apical segment of the acrosome and the plasma membrane is removed essentially from the entire cell. If spermatozoa were homogenized in the absence of Hg2+, analysis of plasma membrane phospholipid composition revealed a complete loss of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) from the plasma membrane after incubation of spermatozoa in minimal capacitating medium (MCM-PL) for 2 hours. Under these culture conditions the addition of Ca2+ (5 mM) to the capacitated spermatozoa induced approximately 78 ± 5% (n = 3) of the motile spermatozoa to undergo acrosome reactions while still maintaining sperm motility (80 ± 5%) (n = 3). If the spermatozoa were homogenized in the presence of Hg2+, a time course study revealed that plasma membrane LPC loss occurred between 60 and 90 minutes of incubation. This complete loss of LPC was evident when approximately half of the capacitated spermatozoa had undergone acrosome reactions. Incubation of the spermatozoa with the metabolic and acrosome reaction inhibitor, 2-deoxyglucose (10 mM) for 2 hours, maintained the plasma membrane phospholipid composition similar to that in the noncapacitated state. These data provide evidence that changes in the plasma membrane phospholipid composition may be associated with guinea pig sperm capacitation.  相似文献   

8.
The membrane mobility agent A2C accelerates the onset of the acrosome reaction of guinea pig spermatozoa by promoting capacitation. Spermatozoa incubated in a suspension of A2C particles in Ca2+-free medium for one hour undergo a synchronous, rapid acrosome reaction upon the addition of Ca2+. These acrosome-reacted spermatozoa are capable of fertilization as assessed by their ability to penetrate (fuse with) zona-free hamster eggs. The disulfide-reducing agent, dithiothreitol (DTT) inhibits A2C-mediated capacitation. It also blocks fertilization of zone-free eggs by acrosome-reacted spermatozoa by preventing attachment of the spermatozoa to the egg plasma membrane. The mode of A2C action on spermatozoa is compared to that of A2C-induced fusion in somatic cells. The similarity of the molecular events in the sperm membrane during capacitation and the acrosome reaction to these in other fusion events is pointed out. Inhibition of capacitation by DTT points to the importance of membrane and/or submembrane proteins and thiol groups in this process. Oxidation of sperm membrane SH groups may play an important role in in vivo capacitation.  相似文献   

9.
Using a semi-chemically defined medium, the requirement of extracellular Ca2+ for survival, capacitation, and acrosome reaction of spermatozoa as well as various stages of fertilization in the hamster was studied. A Ca2+-deficient environment is unfavorable for long-term survival of spermatozoa. Sperm capacitation may occur in Ca2+-deficient media, but not as efficiently as in normal media. The acrosome reaction definitely requires extracellular Ca2+. Other processes or phenomena that require extracellular Ca2+ are initiation and maintenance of hyperactivated motility of spermatozoa, penetration of acrosome-reacted spermatozoa into the zona pellucida, fusion of the spermatozoa with eggs, and the development of pronuclear eggs into two-cell embryos. Extracellular Ca2+ is apparently unnecessary for the attachment of spermatozoa to the zona and egg surfaces, decondensation of the sperm nucleus, and the development of sperm and egg pronuclei within the egg. These results were compared with data obtained in other species such as the sea urchin, mouse, rat and guinea pig.  相似文献   

10.
When guinea pig spermatozoa are preincubated for 1 hr in Ca2+?free medium containing a low concentration of lysolecithin (LC, 85 μg/ml) and then exposed to 2 mM Ca2+ by diluting the preincubation medium with an equal volume of LC?free, 4 mM Ca2+?containing medium, the majority of the spermatozoa undergo acrosome reaction promptly. On the other hand, when the preincubated spermatozoa are exposed to 2 mM Ca2+ without reducing the original concentration of LC in the medium, none of them undergo acrosome reaction. These spermatoza can acrosome?react if they are transferred to an LC?free medium. These results and those of some other experiments suggest that in the presistent presence of a high concentration of LC in the medium, exogenous Ca2+ essential for the acrosome reaction either does not penetrate the sperm plasma membrane or, if it does, it cannot alter the membrane for the acrosome reaction, at least under the experimental conditions employed. Freeze?fracture examination of the sperm plasma membrane has revealed that small areas or patches free of intramembranous paarticles (IMPs) appear in the membrance during sperm preincubation, and these IMP?free areas expand drastically in response to Ca2+ when the LC conccentration in the medium is reduced at the time Ca2+ is added to the medium. In contrast, IMP?free areas remain unchanged even after exposure of spermatozoa to Ca2+ if the concentration of LC remains at its original level of 85 μg/ml.  相似文献   

11.
Ejaculated spermatozoa must undergo physiological priming as they traverse the female reproductive tract before they can bind to the egg’s extracellular coat, the zona pellucida (ZP), undergo the acrosome reaction, and fertilize the egg. The preparatory changes are the net result of a series of biochemical and functional modifications collectively referred to as capacitation. Accumulated evidence suggests that the event that initiates capacitation is the efflux of cholesterol from the sperm plasma membrane (PM). The efflux increases permeability and fluidity of the sperm PM and causes influx of Ca2+ ions that starts a signaling cascade and result in sperm capacitation. The binding of capacitated spermatozoa to ZP further elevates intrasperm Ca2+ and starts a new signaling cascade which open up Ca2+ channels in the sperm PM and outer acrosomal membrane (OAM) and cause the sperm to undergo acrosomal exocytosis. The hydrolytic action of the acrosomal enzymes released at the site of sperm-egg (zona) binding, along with the hyperactivated beat pattern of the bound spermatozoon, are important factors in directing the sperm to penetrate the ZP and fertilize the egg. The role of Ca2+-signaling in sperm capacitation and induction of the acrosome reaction (acrosomal exocytosis) has been of wide interest. However, the precise mechanism(s) of its action remains elusive. In this article, we intend to highlight data from this and other laboratories on Ca2+ signaling cascades that regulate sperm functions.  相似文献   

12.
The distribution of ATPase activity in the heads of uncapacitated, capacitated, and acrosome-reacting guinea-pig spermatozoa was examined cytochemically using the Wachstein-Meisel's technique. In uncapacitated spermatozoa, the reaction products of the enzyme activity were localized on both the inner surface of the plasma membrane and the outer surface of the outer acrosomal membrane. The activity was Mg2+-dependent and inhibited by both Ca2+ and SH-blocking agents. This Mg2+-dependent ATPase activity was also demonstrated at the same sites in capacitated spermatozoa, whereas it was completely absent in acrosome-reacting spermatozoa. Although we did not determine the exact time of inactivation of the enzyme, it appeared to occur before the plasma membrane fused with the underlying outer acrosomal membrane. The abrupt loss of the Mg2+-dependent ATPase activity in the plasma and outer acrosomal membranes immediately before the onset of the acrosome reaction seems to suggest that inactivation of this enzyme by Ca2+ is one of the important biochemical events involved in the acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

13.
The egg jelly-induced acrosome reaction of sea urchin sperm requires the presence of Ca2+ and Na+ in seawater at its normal pH 8. Sperm suspended in seawater at pH 9 undergo the acrosome reaction in the absence of jelly. We have attempted to understand the role of external Na+ in this reaction. Sperm were suspended in Na+-free seawater and the percentage of acrosome reaction and the amount of Ca2+ uptake were determined as a function of external pH. High pH (9.0) in Na+-free medium without jelly triggered a high percentage (above 65%) of sperm acrosome reactions and a two to fourfold increase in Ca2+ uptake. Both the percentage of acrosome reactions and the amount of Ca2+ uptake were similar to those induced by either jelly or pH 9 in Na+-containing seawater. On the other hand, the absence of Na+ in seawater inhibits jelly from inducing Ca2+ uptake and acrosome reactions at pH 8.0 and even at pH 8.5. These results indicate that the Na+ requirement for the acrosome reaction induced by jelly is lost when triggering is by high pH. In contrast, Ca2+ was strictly required since sperm did not react in Ca2+-free seawater at pH 9. We also found that like the jelly-induced acrosome reaction the high-pH-induced acrosome reaction and Ca2+ uptake in complete and Na+-free seawater were inhibited by D600. This finding suggests that the same transport system for Ca2+ uptake associated with the acrosome reaction operates at both triggering conditions, i.e., jelly or pH 9. Although D600 is not now considered a specific blocker, its effect has suggested the involvement of Ca2+ channels in the acrosome reaction. This proposal is supported by our results with nisoldipine, a highly specific inhibitor of calcium channels. The drug inhibited both the sperm acrosome reaction and Ca2+ uptake induced by jelly or pH 9 in complete seawater.  相似文献   

14.
The mammalian sperm acrosome reaction is a unique form of exocytosis, which includes the loss of the involved membranes. Other laboratories have suggested the involvement of hydrolytic enzymes in somatic cell exocytosis and membrane fusion, and in the invertebrate sperm acrosome reaction, but there is no general agreement on such an involvement. Although reference was made to such work in this review, the focus of the review was on the evidence (summarized below) that supports or fails to support the importance of certain hydrolytic enzymes to the mammalian sperm acrosome reaction. Because the events of capacitation, the prerequisite for the mammalian acrosome reaction, and of the acrosome reaction itself are not fully understood or identified, it is not yet always possible to determine whether the role of a particular enzyme is in a very late step of capacitation or part of the acrosome reaction. (1) The results of studies utilizing inhibitors of trypsin-like enzymes suggest that such an enzyme has a role in the membrane events of the golden hamster sperm acrosome reaction. The enzyme involved may be acrosin, but it is possible that some as yet unidentified trypsin-like enzyme on the sperm surface may play a role in addition to or instead of acrosin. Results obtained by others with guinea pig, ram and mouse spermatozoa suggest that a trypsin-like enzyme is not involved in the membrane events of the acrosome reaction, but only in the loss of acrosomal matrix. Such results, which conflict with those of the hamster study, may have been due to species differences or the presence of fusion-promoting phospholipase-A or lipids contaminating the incubation media components, and in one case to the possibly damaging effects of the high level of calcium ionophore used. The role of the trypsin-like enzyme in the membrane events of the hamster sperm acrosome reaction may be to activate a putative prophospholipase and/or to hydrolyse an outer acrosomal or plasma membrane protein, thus promoting fusion. A possible role of the enzyme in the vesiculation step rather than the fusion step of the acrosome reaction cannot be ruled out at present. (2) Experiments utilizing inhibitors of phospholipase-A2, as well as the fusogenic lysophospholipid and cis-unsaturated fatty acid hydrolysis products that would result from such enzyme activity, suggests that a sperm phospholipase-A2 is involved in the golden hamster sperm acrosome reaction. Inhibitor and LPC addition studies in guinea pig spermatozoa have led others to the same conclusion. The fact that partially purified serum albumin is important in so many capacitation media may be explained by its contamination with phospholipase-A and/or phospholipids. Serum albumin may also play a role, at least in part, by its removal of inhibitory products released by the action of phospholipase-A2 in the membrane. The demonstration of phospholipase-A2 activity associated with the acrosome reaction vesicles and/or the soluble component of the acrosome of hamster spermatozoa, and the fact that exogenous phospholipase A2 can stimulate acrosome reactions in hamster and guinea pig spermatozoa, also support a role for the sperm enzyme. The actual site or the sites of the enzyme in the sperm head are not yet known. The enzyme may be on the plasma membrane as well as, or instead of, in the acrosomal membranes or matrix. A substrate for the phospholipase may be phosphatidylcholine produced by phospholipid methylation. It is possible that more than one type of ‘fusogen’ is released by phospholipase activity (LPC and/or cis-unsaturated fatty acids, which have different roles in membrane fusion and/or vesiculation. In addition to acting as a potential ‘fusogen’, arachidonic acid released by sperm phospholipase-A2 probably serves as precursor for cyclo-oxygenase or lipoxygenase pathway metabolites, such as prostaglandins and HETES, which might also play a role in the acrosome reaction. Although much evidence points to a role for phospholipase-A2, phospholipase-C found in spermatozoa could also have a role in the acrosome reaction, perhaps by stimulating events leading to calcium gating, as suggested for this enzyme in somatic secretory cells. (3) A Mg2+-ATPase H+-pump is present in the acrosome of the golden hamster spermatozoon. Inhibition of this pump by certain inhibitors of ATPases (but not by those that only inhibit mitochondrial function) leads to an acrosome reaction only in capacitated spermatozoa and only in the presence of external K+. The enzyme is also inhibited by low levels of calcium, and such inhibition, combined with increased outer membrane permeability to H+ and K+, and possibly plasma membrane permeability to H+ (perhaps by the formation of channels), may be part of capacitation and/or the acrosome reaction. The pH of the hamster sperm acrosome has been shown to become more alkaline during capacitation, and such a change may result in the activation of hydrolytic enzymes in the acrosome or perhaps in a change in membrane permeability to Ca2+. A similar Mg2+-ATPase has not been found in isolated boar sperm head membranes. However, that conflicting result could have been due to the use of noncapacitated boar spermatozoa for the preparation of the membranes or to protease modification of the boar sperm enzyme during assay. (4) Inhibition of Na+, K+-ATPase inhibits the acrosome reaction of golden hamster spermatozoa, and the activity of this enzyme increases relatively early during capacitation. A late influx of K+ is important for the acrosome reaction. However, this late influx may not be due to Na+, K+-ATPase, but instead may be due to a K+ permeability increase (possibly via newly formed channels) in the membranes during capacitation. It is suggested in this review that Na+, K+-ATPase has a role early in capacitation rather than directly in the acrosome reaction (although such a role cannot yet be completely ruled out). One possible role for the enzyme in capacitation might be to stimulate glycolysis (which appears to be essential for capacitation and/or the acrosome reaction of hamster and mouse spermatozoa). The function of the influx of K+ just before the acrosome reaction is probably to stimulate, directly or indirectly, the H+-efflux required for the increase in intraacrosomal pH occurring during capacitation. Direct stimulation of the acrosome reaction by a change in membrane potential resulting directly from K+-influx is not a likely explanation for the hamster results. However, the importance of an earlier membrane potential change, due to increased Na+, K+-ATPase during capacitation, and/or of later membrane potential changes resulting from the pH change, cannot be ruled out. Although K+ is required for the hamster acrosome reaction, other workers have reported that K+ inhibits guinea pig sperm capacitation. However, the experimental procedures used in the guinea pig sperm studies raise some questions about the interpretation of those inhibition results. (5) Ca2+-influx is known to be required for the acrosome reaction. Others have suggested that increased Ca2+-influx due to inhibition or stimulation of sperm membrane calcium transport ATPases are involved in the acrosome reaction. There is as yet no direct or indirect biochemical evidence that inhibition or stimulation of such enzymatic activity is involved in the acrosome reaction, and further studies are needed on those questions. (6) I suggest that the hydrolytic enzymes important to the hamster sperm acrosome reaction will also prove important for the acrosome reaction of all other eutherian mammals.  相似文献   

15.
Guinea pig spermatozoa were collected from the caudae epididymides in various isotonic solutions and the intracellular sodium and potassium content was determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy. The sperm intracellular Na and K content was found to be influenced by large variations in the extracellular concentrations of these ions. Treatment of spermatozoa suspended in a saline-based solution with the monovalent ionophores monensin or nigericin caused an approximate 2-fold increase in the intracellular Na content and a 3–6 fold decrease in the intracellular K content. Incubation of the spermatozoa in a K+-free minimal culture medium (MCM-PL) at a pH of 7.6 or 8.3 for 2 hr caused an approximate 2-fold increase in the sperm intracellular Na content and a 5-fold decrease in the intracellular K content. The motile spermatozoa incubated for 2 hr at pH 7.6 showed less than 5% acrosome reactions, compared with 30–40% acrosome reactions after incubation at pH 8.3, in response to the addition of 5 mM Ca2+. Changes in the sperm intracellular elemental composition during culture in vitro, which may lead to an acrosome reaction, are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Thapsigargin (TG), a plant-derived sesquiterpene lactone, inhibits several isoforms of both the sarcoplasmic and endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPases. Thus, intracellular Ca2+ stores found in the endoplasmic reticulum can be released by this compound. The mammalian sperm acrosome reaction (AR) depends on influx of extracellular Ca2+. However, few reports have presented evidence for the involvement of putative Ca2+ stores and intracellular Ca2+ mobilization in the AR. Thus, we designed experiments to evaluate the effect of TG on the hamster sperm AR. Thapsigargin stimulated—in a dose-dependent manner—the AR of spermatozoa previously capacitated for at least 3 hr, not affecting sperm motility. A maximal stimulatory effect was apparent 3 min after addition of TG to spermatozoa previously capacitated for 4 hr and was dependent on external Ca2+ since ethyleneglycol-bis-(b-amino-ethyl ether) N,N′-tetra-acetic acid added 1 min before TG completely inhibited AR stimulation. The Ca2+ channel blockers diltiazem and nifedipine also abolished the TG-stimulatory effect when added to capacitated spermatozoa 10 min before the inhibitor. In addition, the trypsin inhibitors p-nitrophenyl-p′-guanidine-benzoate hydrochloride and benzamidine added to the sperm suspensions 10 min before TG inhibited by 70–80% the TG-induced AR. These results indicate that putative Ca2+ stores release may be involved in stimulation of extracellular Ca2+ influx required for the occurrence of the AR. In addition, a sperm trypsin-like protease may be part of the mechanism by which TG induces the hamster sperm AR. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 51:84–91, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
A study of interaction between gametes in the mouse, using live and glutaraldehyde-fixed eggs, showed that, while in live eggs the binding is a two-step process (“early” and “late” binding), the process is one step when the spermatozoa interact with fixed eggs. The second point that emerged from this study is that uncapacitated and capacitated spermatozoa bind the zonae pellucidae of live and fixed eggs in the same way, but only the capacitated spermatozoa bound to live eggs undergo a complete acrosome reaction and penetrate the zona pellucida. Moreover, it has been shown that binding to fixed eggs, just as to live eggs, is Ca2+-dependent, and it can be reversed by EGTA. Fixed eggs thus are a good model to study only one step of the sperm-egg interaction removed from all the other events of the fertilization process.  相似文献   

18.
Capacitation and the acrosome reaction in squirrel monkey seminal spermatozoa diluted in Tyrode's medium (TALP) and TC-199 were monitored by a chlortetracycline (CTC) fluorescence assay. Four CTC patterns, similar to those found in human sperm, were readily characterized by fluorescent staining on the heads of the spermatozoa. The appearance of the capacitated (CP) pattern was dependent on the concentration of the bovine serum albumin. Acrosomal loss was observed in a maximum of 15% of the sperm in the populations studied here. Calcium ionophore A23187 (5 μM to 20μM) induced acrosomal loss in 60–70% of capacitated spermatozoa. However in freshly ejaculated sperm incubated under capacitating conditions or in spermatozoa incubated in Ca+ +-free medium, A23187 failed to induce acrosomal loss. Furthermore, spermatozoa incubated in the presence of seminal plasma or spermatozoa obtained following a 1-hour “swim-up” procedure showed an identical timecourse of appearance of the CP pattern, indicating the lack of effect of seminal plasma on capacitation in the squirrel monkey.  相似文献   

19.
Before a sperm can fertilize an egg it must undergo a final activation step induced by the egg termed the acrosome reaction. During the acrosome reaction a lysosome-related organelle, the acrosome, fuses with the plasma membrane to release hydrolytic enzymes and expose an egg-binding protein. Because NAADP (nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate) releases Ca2+ from acidic lysosome-related organelles in other cell types, we investigated a possible role for NAADP in mediating the acrosome reaction. We report that NAADP binds with high affinity to permeabilized sea urchin sperm. Moreover, we used Mn2+ quenching of luminal fura-2 and 45Ca2+ to directly demonstrate NAADP regulation of a cation channel on the acrosome. Additionally, we show that NAADP synthesis occurs through base exchange and is driven by an increase in Ca2+. We propose a new model for acrosome reaction signaling in which Ca2+ influx initiated by egg jelly stimulates NAADP synthesis and that this NAADP acts on its receptor/channel on the acrosome to release Ca2+ to drive acrosomal exocytosis.  相似文献   

20.
Progesterone interaction with human spermatozoa promotes a rise in intracellular Ca2+ and can trigger acrosomal exocytosis in capacitated cells. We have used nifedipine, a 1,4-dihydropyridine Ca2+ channel antagonist, to investigate the possibility that Ca2+ channels play a role in the progesterone-stimulated exocytotic response. Cells were assessed biochemically for the generation of diacylglycerol (DAG) and microscopically for acrosome loss using chlortetracycline fluorescence. When motile cells were preincubated for 5 hr using culture conditions similar to those used for successful human in vitro fertilization, a short exposure to progesterone significantly stimulated DAG formation and acrosomal exocytosis. The addition of nifedipine (10 and 100 nM), either at time 0 or just prior to progesterone introduction, significantly inhibited both DAG formation and exocytosis, suggesting that Ca2+ channels are involved in the responses observed. Treatment of capacitated cells with a synthetic permeant DAG stimulated exocytosis irrespective of whether nifedipine was present, indicating that Ca2+ channels function prior to DAG generation. The possibility that an influx of Na+, as well as Ca2+, might be involved in the exocytotic pathway was investigated using the monovalent cation ionophores monensin and nigericin. Both significantly stimulated DAG generation and acrosome loss, but the prior inclusion of nifedipine significantly inhibited all responses. These results strongly suggest that the entry of Ca2+ through Ca2+ channels, with characteristics similar to those of L-type, voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels found in cardiac and skeletal muscle, is a crucial step in the sequence of events leading to exocytosis in progesterone-stimulated human spermatozoa. An influx of Na+ also may play a role, but at a point prior to the opening of Ca2+ channels. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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