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1.
The acrosome in the sperm of the toad, Bufo bufo japonicus, consists of a membrane-limited acrosomal cap and a fibrous perforatorium. When sperm are incubated with the oviducal pars recta extract (PRE) for 30–60 min, the outer acrosomal membrane fuses with the overlying plasma membrane at several points with concomitant loss of the contents of the acrosomal cap. The inner acrosomal membrane thus exposed fuses with the plasma membrane at the caudal end of the acrosomal region. This PRE-induced acrosome reaction is completely inhibited by soybean trypsin inhibitor. Sperm found in the innermost jelly layer of inseminated eggs possess an intact acrosome, but those either passing through the vitelline coat or localizing in the perivitelline space are acrosome-reacted in the same manner as when treated with PRE. These observations, combined with recent evidence showing involvement of the pars recta substance in fertilization, indicate that the acrosome reaction occurring in a fertilizing sperm at or near the surface of the vitelline coat is a response to a substance that is derived from the pars recta and deposited in the vitelline coat.  相似文献   

2.
Ueda Y  Kubo H  Iwao Y 《Developmental biology》2003,264(1):289-298
We previously demonstrated that Xenopus sperm undergo an acrosome reaction on the vitelline envelope (VE) in response to the materials secreted from the oviductal pars recta [Dev. Biol. 243 (2002), 55]. A monoclonal antibody against the acrosome reaction-inducing substance in Xenopus (ARISX) was obtained by immunizing mice with pars recta extract (PRE). The acrosome reaction by PRE or on the VE was effectively inhibited by the intact anti-ARISX antibody as well as its Fab fragment, indicating that the antibody recognizes the epitopes localized on the acrosome reaction-inducing substance. On Western blots, the anti-ARISX antibody recognized a molecule with an apparent molecular mass of 300 kDa in PRE and in the VE, but this molecule was not detected in the coelomic envelope. The amount of ARISX in PRE was increased by the treatment of females with pregnant mare serum gonadotropin. Periodate oxidation of PRE completely abolished the acrosome reaction-inducing activity, indicating the involvement of the carbohydrate moieties of ARISX in inducing the acrosome reaction. On immunofluorescence observation, ARISX was localized in the epithelial cells in the posterior region of the pars recta and on the VE as fibrous structures.  相似文献   

3.
The acrosome reaction of Xenopus sperm is triggered by the acrosome reaction-inducing substance in Xenopus (ARISX), an oviductal pars recta-derived, sugar-rich substance decorated on the entire surface of the vitelline envelope (VE) during ovulation. Here we addressed the functional importance of the sugar moiety in ARISX. Among various lectins examined, soybean agglutinin and Dolichos biflorus agglutinin were shown to abolish the acrosome reaction-inducing activity of ARISX present in pars recta extract or on the VE, indicating the importance of the terminal alpha-N-acetylgalactosamine residue for the function of ARISX. Consistently, the acrosome reaction-inducing activity was not affected by proteinase K digestion, in spite of the simultaneous shift of ARISX to a smaller molecular weight. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopic examinations showed that ARISX was distributed as two types of structures on VE; thick fiber-like materials and thin filamentous materials, and that a new structure appeared on the fertilization envelope instead of the thin filamentous materials. Sperm from several amphibian species were subjected to an in vitro assay during induction of the acrosome reaction with ARISX. The resulting limited population of sperm from a non-Xenopus species underwent acrosome reaction, implying a weak species-specificity of ARISX.  相似文献   

4.
The acrosome reaction of newt sperm is induced at the surface of egg jelly and the acrosome-reacted sperm acquire the ability to bind to the vitelline envelope. However, because the substance that induces the acrosome reaction has not been identified, the mechanism by which the acrosome-reacted sperm bind to the vitelline envelope remains unclear. We found here that a Dolichos biforus agglutinin (DBA) specifically mimicked the acrosome reaction immediately upon its addition in the presence of milimolar level Ca(2+). Fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled DBA bound specifically to the acrosomal cap of the intact sperm in the presence of a Ca(2+)-chelating agent, EDTA, suggesting that binding of DBA to the native receptor for the egg jelly substance on the acrosomal region took the place of the egg jelly substance-induced acrosome reaction. In contrast, the sperm that had been acrosome reacted by DBA treatment did not bind to the vitelline envelope of the egg whose jelly layers were removed. Subsequent addition of jelly extract caused the sperm binding to vitelline envelope, indicating that the egg jelly of the newt contains substances that are involved in not only inducing the acrosome reaction but also binding to the vitelline envelope. This is the first demonstration of the involvement of egg jelly substance in the binding of acrosome-reacted sperm to the vitelline envelope.  相似文献   

5.
Sperm from the toad Bufo arenarum must penetrate the egg jelly before reaching the vitelline envelope (VE), where the acrosome reaction is triggered. When the jelly coat is removed, sperm still bind to the VE, but acrosomal exocytosis is not promoted. Our previous work demonstrated that diffusible substances of the jelly coat, termed "egg water" (EW), triggered capacitation-like changes in B. arenarum sperm, promoting the acquisition of a transient fertilizing capacity. In the present work, we correlated this fertilizing capacity with the ability of the sperm to undergo the acrosome reaction, further substantiating the role of the jelly coat in fertilization. When sperm were exposed to the VE, only those preincubated in EW for 5 or 8 min underwent an increase in the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)), which led to acrosomal exocytosis. Responsiveness to the VE was not acquired on preincubation in EW for 2 or 15 min or in Ringer solution regardless of the preincubation time. In contrast, depletion of intracellular Ca(2+) stores (induced by thapsigargin) promoted [Ca(2+)](i) rise and the acrosome reaction even in sperm that were not exposed to EW. Acrosomal exocytosis was blocked by the presence of Ca(2+) chelators independent of whether a physiological or pharmacological stimulus was used. However, Ni(2+) and mibefradil prevented [Ca(2+)](i) rise and the acrosome reaction of sperm exposed to the VE but not of sperm exposed to thapsigargin. These data suggest that the acrosomal responsiveness of B. arenarum sperm, present during a narrow period, is acquired during EW incubation and involves the modulation of a voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channel.  相似文献   

6.
We have developed an assay for detecting the acrosome reaction in mouse sperm using chlortetracycline (CTC) as a fluorescent probe. Sperm known to be intact with nonreacted acrosomes show CTC fluorescence in the presence of Ca2+ over the anterior portion of the sperm head on the plasma membrane covering the acrosome. Sperm which have undergone the acrosome reaction do not show fluorescence on the sperm head. Mouse sperm bind to zonae pellucidae of cumulus-free eggs in vitro in a Ca2+-dependent reaction; these sperm are intact by the CTC assay. Intact sperm bind to mechanically isolated zonae under the same conditions: the egg is apparently unnecessary for this inital reaction. Sperm suspensions, in which greater than 50% of the motile population had completed the acrosome reaction, were prepared by incubation in hyperosmolal medium followed by treatment with the divalent cation ionophore, A23187. Cumulus-free eggs challenged with such sperm suspensions preferentially bind intact sperm; acrosome-reacted sperm do not bind. We conclude that the plasma membrane of the mouse sperm is responsible for recognition of the egg's zona pellucida and that the obligatory sequence of reactions leading to fusion of mouse gametes is binding of the intact sperm to the zona pellucida, followed by the acrosome reaction at the zona surface, followed in turn by sperm penetration of the zona.  相似文献   

7.
ZP3, a glycoprotein of the murine zona pellucida, functions both to bind acrosome intact sperm and to induce the acrosome reaction. Solubilized whole zonae as well as purified ZP3 are able to induce acrosome reactions in capacitated sperm. Pronase digests of whole zonae yield glycopeptides that bind to sperm but are unable to induce acrosome reactions. However, immunoaggregation of these glycopeptides results in the exocytosis of the acrosome in the majority of treated sperm. The data suggest that ZP3 triggers the acrosome reaction by the aggregation of ZP3 binding sites on the sperm head. If aggregation of ZP3 binding sites is important in the induction of the acrosome reaction, then it may be possible to induce the acrosome reaction in the absence of zona by immunoaggregation of the sites. This presentation deals with the immunoaggregation of a proteinase inhibitor of seminal vesicle origin (SVI) that binds to a site on the sperm head known to participate in zona binding. We show that capacitated murine sperm, pretreated with the SVI, will acrosome react, as determined by Coomassie brilliant blue staining, when incubated with rabbit antiinhibitor antiserum (anti-SVI). The percentage of SVI-treated sperm displaying an acrosome reaction is dependent on the concentration of the immune serum. Sperm stain positive for intact acrosomes when anti-SVI Fab fragments or normal rabbit serum is substituted for the immune serum. However, when capacitated sperm, treated with both SVI and anti-SVI Fab fragments, are incubated with goat antirabbit IgG, the majority of sperm acrosome react. The data suggest that the aggregation of SVI bound to the sperm surface, in the absence of zona glycoproteins, is sufficient to induce the acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

8.
Previous investigations showed that VLA-6 integrin present on boar sperm membrane can induce acrosome reaction upon exposure to laminin accumulated in expanded cumuli (Mattioli et al., 1998. To further investigate this novel sperm egg-recognition system, the authors studied the distribution of VLA-6 integrin on the membrane of boar sperm throughout capacitation and following acrosome reaction, and analyzed intracellular Ca(2+) changes occurring in spermatozoa exposed to laminin. Immunofluorescent localisation of VLA-6 revealed a low proportion (nearly 22%) of positive cells in freshly ejaculated sperm, with integrin mainly concentrated in clustered spots. After 3 hr incubation most of the spermatozoa showed integrin molecules on the membrane, with three different labeling patterns: fluorescence localised on the edge of the acrosome (58.2 +/- 14.2% of the cells); fluorescence uniformly spread over the whole sperm head (5.0 +/- 1.9%) and finally fluorescence concentrated in clustered spots (7.6 +/- 5.6%), as recorded in freshly ejaculated sperm. Twenty-nine percent of cells did not show any distinct fluorescence. Following acrosome reaction sperm with fluorescence on the acrosomal region virtually disappeared and the proportion of unstained cells rose from 29.2 +/- 9.2 to 69.0 +/- 10.1%. Electron microscopy demonstrated that VLA-6 integrin was exclusively located on the sperm membrane of intact spermatozoa. Confocal analysis showed that laminin triggers distinct Ca(2+) raises, and that sperm exposed and kept in the presence of laminin fully retained their ability to rise intracellular Ca(2+) in response to zona pellucida proteins. These data indicate that boar sperm accumulate VLA-6 integrin on the membrane and concentrate it on the acrosomal region as capacitation progresses. Probably due to this compartmentalisation, sperm exposed to laminin experience a Ca(2+) raise that originates in the anterior sperm head where it is more adequate for the induction of acrosome reaction. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 59:322-329, 2001.  相似文献   

9.
Contrary to the widely accepted view that chiton sperm lack acrosomes and that fertilization in this group occurs via a micropyle, we demonstrate here that fertilization in Tonicella lineata occurs by acrosome-mediated sperm-egg fusion. The acrosome is a small vesicle containing two granules located at the tip of the sperm. The eggs have an elaborate hull (=chorion), which is formed into cupules that remain covered by follicle cells until maturity. When dissected ripe eggs were exposed to sperm in vitro, the sperm were attracted only to open cupules, inside which they swam through one of seven channels to the base where they penetrated the hull. The acrosome fired on contact with, or in, the hull, and during passage through it the apical granule was exhausted while the basal granule was exposed. If sperm contacted follicle cells between the cupules the acrosome did not react. The vitelline layer beneath the hull contains pores arranged in a regular pattern. Embedded in the base of each pore is an egg microvillus. Having penetrated the hull the sperm anterior filament located a pore and fused with the tip of the egg microvillus projecting into it. This created a membranous tube, through which the sperm nucleus was injected into the egg. The egg membrane appeared to be raised up into a small fertilization cone around the penetrating sperm, the vitelline layer became slightly elevated, and some cortical granules were released by exocytosis.  相似文献   

10.
Calcium influx is required for the mammalian sperm acrosome reaction (AR), an exocytotic event occurring in the sperm head prior to fertilization. We show here that thapsigargin, a highly specific inhibitor of the microsomal Ca(2+)-Mg(2+)-ATPase (Ca(2+) pump), can initiate acrosomal exocytosis in capacitated bovine and ram spermatozoa. Initiation of acrosomal exocytosis by thapsigargin requires an influx of Ca(2+), since incubation of cells in the absence of added Ca(2+) or in the presence of the calcium channel blocker, La(3+), completely inhibited thapsigargin-induced acrosomal exocytosis. ATP-Dependent calcium accumulation into nonmitochondrial stores was detected in permeabilized sperm in the presence of ATP and mitochondrial uncoupler. This activity was inhibited by thapsigargin. Thapsigargin elevated the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)), and this increase was inhibited when extracellular Ca(2+) was chelated by EGTA, indicating that this rise in Ca(2+) is derived from the external medium. This rise of [Ca(2+)](i) took place first in the head and later in the midpiece of the spermatozoon. However, immunostaining using a polyclonal antibody directed against the purified inositol 1,4,5-tris-phosphate receptor (IP(3)-R) identified specific staining in the acrosome region, in the postacrosome, and along the tail, but not in the midpiece region. No staining in the acrosome region was observed in sperm without acrosome, indicating that the acrosome cap was stained in intact sperm. The presence of IP(3)-R in the anterior acrosomal region as well as the induction, by thapsigargin, of intracellular Ca(2+) elevation in the acrosomal region and acrosomal exocytosis, implicates the acrosome as a potential cellular Ca(2+) store. We suggest here that the cytosolic Ca(2+) is actively transported into the acrosome by an ATP-dependent, thapsigargin-sensitive Ca(2+) pump and that the accumulated Ca(2+) is released from the acrosome via an IP(3)-gated calcium channel. The ability of thapsigargin to increase [Ca(2+)](i) could be due to depletion of Ca(2+) in the acrosome, resulting in the opening of a capacitative calcium entry channel in the plasma membrane. The effect of thapsigargin on elevated [Ca(2+)](i) in capacitated cells was 2-fold higher than that in noncapacitated sperm, suggesting that the intracellular Ca pump is active during capacitation and that this pump may have a role in regulating [Ca(2+)](i) during capacitation and the AR.  相似文献   

11.
The acrosome located within the mammalian sperm head is essential for successful fertilization, as it enables the sperm to penetrate the extracellular layers of the oocyte and fuse with oolemma. However, the mammalian acrosomal vesicle is no longer considered to contain only hydrolytic enzymes. Using label-free nano-scale liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (nLC-MS/MS) proteomics, we identified a total of 885 proteins in the acrosome isolated from spermatozoa obtained from cauda epididymis of free-living house mice Mus musculus musculus contains a total of 885 proteins. Among these, 334 proteins were significantly enriched in the acrosome thus representing 27.3% of the whole proteome of the intact sperm. Importantly, we have detected a total of nine calycins while eight of them belong to the lipocalin protein family. In mice, lipocalins are involved in multi-level chemical communication between individuals including pheromone transport and odor perception. Using an indirect immunofluorescence assay, we demonstrated that lipocalin 5 (LCN5) is expressed in the mouse germ cells, and after completing spermatogenesis, it remains localized in the sperm acrosome until the last step of the extratesticular maturation, the acrosome reaction. The presence of lipocalins in the acrosome and acrosome-reacted sperm suggests their original role as chelators of organic and potentially toxic compounds resulting from ongoing spermiogenesis. Along with this evidence, detected mitochondrial (e.g., a subunit of the cytochrome c oxidase MTCO1) and proteasomal proteins (subunits of both 20 S core proteasome [PSMA2, PSMBs] and 19 S regulatory particle [PSMDs]) in acrosomes provide further evidence that acrosomes could also function as `waste baskets` after testicular sperm maturation.  相似文献   

12.
The vitelline coat of sea urchin eggs was disrupted by DTT and trypsin after removal of the jelly layer. Thereafter the percentage of acrosome reaction was determined and the fertilization rate was estimated, employing the treated eggs. Electron microscopical investigation of these eggs showed that the vitelline coat was disrupted but no morphological difference was observed between eggs treated with DTT and those treated with trypsin. However, the fertilizability of the eggs was markedly decreased by the treatment with trypsin. In contrast, DTT treatment did not affect the fertilizability of the eggs, indicating that some surface substance(s) necessary for fertilization which were not eliminated by DTT were digested by trypsin. At the same time, the percentage of acrosome reaction of supernumerary spermatozoa in the presence of variously treated eggs was estimated as an index of the acrosome reaction-inducing activity of the egg surface. The acrosome reaction of spermatozoa actually occurred at the surface of de-jellied and DTT-treated eggs. However, the eggs treated with trypsin lost the capacity to induce the acrosome reaction. The surface substance which induces the acrosome reaction and renders the eggs fertile was removed by trypsin and found in the supernatant fraction. The necessity of an acrosome reaction for fertilization was demonstrated by the fact that the low fertilizability of trypsin-treated eggs was brought back to the control level by insemination with spermatozoa previously treated with egg water to evoke the reaction of the acrosomes.  相似文献   

13.
Calcium flux is required for the mammalian sperm acrosome reaction, an exocytotic event triggered by egg binding, which results in a dramatic rise in sperm intracellular calcium. Calcium-dependent membrane fusion results in the release of enzymes that facilitate sperm penetration through the zona pellucida during fertilization. We have characterized inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)-gated calcium channels and upstream components of the phosphoinositide signaling system in mammalian sperm. Peptide antibodies colocalized G alpha q/11 and the beta 1 isoform of phospholipase C (PLC beta 1) to the anterior acrosomal region of mouse sperm. Western blotting using a polyclonal antibody directed against purified brain IP3 receptor (IP3R) identified a specific 260 kD band in 1% Triton X-100 extracts of rat, hamster, mouse and dog sperm. In each species, IP3R immunostaining localized to the acrosome cap. Scatchard analysis of [3H]IP3 binding to rat sperm sonicates revealed a curvilinear plot with high affinity (Kd = 26 nM, Bmax = 30 pmol/mg) and low affinity (Kd = 1.6 microM, Bmax = 550 pmol/mg) binding sites, reflecting among the highest receptor densities in mammalian tissue. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed the acrosomal localization in rat sperm. The IP3R fractionated with acrosomes by discontinuous sucrose gradient centrifugation and was enriched in the medium of acrosome- reacted sperm. ATP-dependent 45Ca2+ loading of digitonin permeabilized rat sperm was decreased by 45% in the presence of 10 microM IP3. The IP3-mediated release of calcium was blocked by heparin. Thapsigargin, a sequiterpene lactone inhibitor of the microsomal Ca(2+)-ATPase, stimulated the acrosome reaction of mouse sperm to the same extent as the Ca2+ ionophore, A23187. The failure of caffeine and ryanodine to affect calcium accumulation suggested that thapsigargin acted through an IP3-sensitive store. The presence of G alpha q/11, PLC beta 1 and a functional IP3R in the anterior acrosomal region of mammalian sperm, as well as thapsigargin''s induction of the acrosome reaction, implicate IP3-gated calcium release in the mammalian acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

14.
Intracellular Ca2+ regulates many fundamental physiological processes in excitable and non-excitable cells. Certainly this is the case of sperm where the local concentration of intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) is significantly influenced by Ca2+ permeable channels present in the cell plasma membrane. Amongst these channels, the voltage dependent Ca2+ channels (CaV) of the T-type (CaV3) appear to have an eminent role in the acrosome reaction (AR) of some sperm species, though they may participate in other important functions like motility and capacitation. The AR is an exocytotic event where the acrosome vesicle in the posterior region of the head fuses with the plasma membrane. This reaction allows sperm to fuse and fertilize the egg. Here we summarize our present knowledge regarding CaV3 channels in sperm, show the first direct electrophysiological evidence for their presence in maturing mouse sperm and discuss some of the relevant unanswered questions.  相似文献   

15.
The sensitivity of dog sperm cells for extracellular Ca(2+)/Ca(2+)-ionophore challenge was compared to the detrimental effects of an optimized freeze/thawing protocol. Three sperm-rich fractions of ejaculates from 9 dogs were obtained, and one aliquot of each ejaculate was washed in a modified Tyrode's medium (HBT containing 0.1 mM Ca(2+)), without (control sample) and with 2.5 microM Ca(2+)-ionophore (induced sample) and incubated for 60 min at 38 degrees C in humidified atmosphere. Another aliquot from the same semen fractions was diluted, washed in a Tris buffer, and packed into 0.5-ml straws with a Tris buffer containing 7.5 vol % glycerol. The samples were stored for 1 week in liquid nitrogen after a computer-driven three-step freeze protocol and subsequently thawed for 50 sec in a 37 degrees C water bath and reconstituted into HBT. The acrosome integrity was determined using fluorescein-conjugated peanut agglutinin (PNA-FITC) as an acrosomal marker, while the vitality of the sperm cells was simultaneously assessed with the membrane impermeable DNA supravital stain ethidium homodimer 1 (EthD-1) using fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. The motility of frozen/thawed sperm samples was evaluated by microscopic as well as computerized motility analyses. Remarkably, the percentage sperm cells that underwent acrosome reactions induced by Ca(2+)-ionophore correlated very positively (r = 0.93) with the amount of acrosome damage observed in cryopreserved sperm samples. Furthermore, the degree of cellular damage induced by Ca(2+)-ionophore treatment correlated very negatively (r = -0.99) with the relative amount of sperm cells that remained motile after cryopreservation. Such clear correlations between Ca(2+)-ionophore induced acrosome reaction and motility parameters for frozen/thawed dog sperm cells were not found, suggesting that the generation of acrosome leakage and sperm immotility are two independent detrimental processes occurring during cryopreservation. From these results it can be concluded that Ca(2+)-ionophore treatment followed by simultaneous determination PNA-FITC and EthD-1 staining can be used to predict the cryopreservability of ejaculates from individual dogs used as donors.  相似文献   

16.
Fertilization occurs after the completion of the sperm acrosome reaction, a secretory event that is triggered during gamete adhesion. ZP3, an egg zona pellucida glycoprotein, produces a sustained increase of the internal Ca(2+) concentration in mouse sperm, leading to acrosome reactions. Here we show that the sustained Ca(2+) concentration increase is due to the persistent activation of a Ca(2+) influx mechanism during the late stages of ZP3 signal transduction. These cells also possess a Ca(2+) store depletion-activated Ca(2+) entry pathway that is open after treatment with thapsigargin. Thapsigargin and ZP3 activate the same Ca(2+) permeation mechanism, as demonstrated by fluorescence quenching experiments and by channel antagonists. These studies show that ZP3 generates a sustained Ca(2+) influx through a store depletion-operated pathway and that this drives the exocytotic acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

17.
Abalone eggs are surrounded by a complex extracellular coat that contains three distinct elements: the jelly layer, the vitelline envelope, and the egg surface coat. In this study we used light and electron microscopy to describe these three elements in the red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) and ascribe function to each based on their interactions with sperm. The jelly coat is a spongy matrix that lies at the outermost margin of the egg and consists of variably sized fibers. Sperm pass through this layer with their acrosomes intact and then go on to bind to the vitelline envelope. The vitelline envelope is a multilamellar fibrous layer that appears to trigger the acrosome reaction after sperm binding. Next, sperm release lysin from their acrosomal granules, a nonenzymatic protein that dissolves a hole in the vitelline envelope through which the sperm swims. Sperm then contact the egg surface coat, a network of uniformly sized filaments lying directly above the egg plasma membrane. This layer mediates attachment of sperm, via their acrosomal process, to the egg surface. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
An acrosome reaction occurs by fusion between the acrosomal outer membrane and the plasmalemma enclosing the acrosome in Ciona intestinalis spermatozoa. The fusion seems to proceed along the peripheral margin of the acrosome, which causes vesiculation. The membrane bound vesicle formed by this process is probably shed by the sperm. The acrosomal inner membrane is exposed and becomes a part of the plasmalemma enclosing the anterior region of the sperm head. During this process, any acrosomal substance might be released through the opening formed by membrane fusion. The acrosome reaction most likely occurs in C. intestinalis spermatozoa, via vesiculation, in fundamentally the same way as observed in mammalian spermatozoa.  相似文献   

19.
The acrosome of Platycleis albopunctata (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) is relatively large and complex, consisting of an apical vesicle and two large wing-like extensions that give the spermatozoon the shape of an arrow. The wings have actin microfilaments and microtubules and are covered with a noticeable extracellular material. Actin filaments are present in the acrosome when it first appears in spermatid stages. The acrosome and the acrosomal attachment to the nucleus are more resistant than other structures to the reducing agents DTT and SDS. At the end of spermiogenesis, groups of spermatozoa juxtapose their sperm heads and become joined to form a spermatodesm encircled by an amorphous material. Treatment with the ionophore A23187 rapidly disrupted acrosomes of the free gametes, but acrosomes from spermatozoa contained in the spermatodesm were not disassembled. Packaging of sperm in a spermatodesm appears to protect the acrosome.  相似文献   

20.
Polycystin-2, the protein mutated in type 2 autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, is an integral transmembrane protein with nonselective cation channel activity. Here we report on the sea urchin sperm homolog of polycystin-2 (suPC2). Like other polycystin-2 family members, suPC2 is a six-pass transmembrane protein containing C-terminal cytoplasmic EF hand and coiled-coil domains. The protein localizes exclusively to the plasma membrane over the sperm acrosomal vesicle. This localization coincides with the previously reported localization of the sea urchin PC1 homolog, suREJ3. Co-immunoprecipitation shows that suPC2 and suREJ3 are associated in the membrane. The location of suPC2 suggests that it may function as a cation channel mediating the sperm acrosome reaction. The low cation selectivity of PC2 channels would explain data indicating that Na(+) and Ca(2+) may enter sea urchin sperm through the same channel during the acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

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