首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
In the current study we investigated the progesterone receptor exposure on the sperm from the testis and different parts of the epididymis, the relation to the sperm maturation stage, the functionality of the progesterone receptor and the capacity of sperm to undergo acrosome reaction. Exposed progesterone receptors on spermatozoa were detected using Progesterone-BSA conjugate labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (P-BSA-FITC) or a monoclonal antibody against progesterone receptor, C-262. Either progesterone or calcium ionophore was used to induce acrosome reaction. A high percentage (69 +/- 8%; mean +/- SD) of spermatozoa from the cauda epididymis showed P-BSA-FITC labeling at the onset of incubation, whereas only 0.1 +/- 1 and 4 +/- 2%, of spermatozoa from the testes, caput, and corpus epididymis, respectively, were labeled. There was no significant increase in P-BSA-FITC binding during the course of a 6 hr incubation. Treatment with either 10 microM progesterone or 5 microM calcium ionophore induced acrosome reaction in cauda epididymal sperm but not in testicular sperm, caput or corpus epipidymal sperm. It is concluded that the matured sperm of the dog from cauda epididymis and freshly ejaculated sperm demonstrate a functional membrane-bound progesterone receptor while less matured spermatozoa from the testicle, caput, and corpus epididymis fail to demonstrate such a receptor. Acrosome reaction of dog sperm can be induced using either progesterone or calcium ionophore; however, the maturation stages of spermatozoa influence this occurrence.  相似文献   

2.
It was possible to demembrante and reactivate not only freshly collected testicular, cauda epididymal, and ejaculated ram sperm but also sperm that had been stored for several days at 0 degrees C and for several months at -196 degrees C in rete testis fluid or egg yolk citrate media. Sperm were usually washed free of seminal plasma before demembranation, but this was not essential for reactivation. Bovine serum albumin (1.0%) in the wash medium increased the survival of sperm, but more than 0.25% in the extraction medium decreased reactivation. A macro-molecular component of cauda epididymal fluid also inhibited the reactivation of testicular sperm. Triton X-100 concentrations between 0.01% and 1.00% in the extraction medium were satisfactory for demembranating the sperm. Rapid cooling (i.e., cold shock) mimicked the effect of detergent in making the sperm responsive to added ATP and demonstrated that damage to ram sperm in cold shock does not involve the axoneme. Ejaculated and cauda sperm were reactivated immediately on addition of ATP and activity persisted for up to 10 min. Testicular sperm, on the other hand, required about 4 min to become fully reactivated. The optimal ATP concentration for activation of sperm was 0.1-1.0 mM. Magnesium ions (0.1-1.0 mM) were important for reactivation, and testicular sperm required a higher magnesium concentration than did cauda or ejaculated sperm. Manganese ions were almost as effective as magnesium for reactivating cauda epididymal and ejaculated sperm. Cobalt and cadmium ions were much less active for cauda and ejaculated sperm and none of these ions were effective for testicular sperm. Fluoride (25-50 mM) inhibited reactivation. The presence of 50 microM cAMP in the extraction medium or preincubation of testicular sperm with theophylline or caffeine increased low levels of activation, but this was not evident with ejaculated or cauda sperm. We conclude that the motor apparatus is already functionally assembled in spermatozoa on leaving the testis, but some fine adjustment must take place during maturation in the epididymis.  相似文献   

3.
Previously, we identified a 26-kDa fertility-associated protein in bull seminal plasma as lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase. The objective of the present study was to immunohistochemically localize this enzyme to the various cell types within the bull testis and seven subsegments of the epididymis, and on ejaculated sperm in order to gain further insight into its potential function in male reproduction. In the testis, immunoperoxidase staining was localized within the elongating spermatids and Sertoli cells of the seminiferous tubules, varying with the stage of the spermatogenic cycle. The highest level of staining occurred during stages III-VII. The cuboidal epithelial cells of the rete testis and efferent ducts were also immunoreactive. Expression of lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase was not uniform in the seven epididymal subsegments, suggesting a possible role in sperm maturation. In all epididymal regions, expression was limited to the epithelial principal cells; no immunoreactivity was apparent in other cell types. Lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase was strikingly localized in the caput epididymidis, while moderate to weak staining was observed in the remainder of the epididymis. Droplets of reaction product observed within the lumen increased progressively from the caput to cauda. Using fluorescence microscopy, we also localized lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase to the apical ridge of the acrosome on ejaculated sperm.  相似文献   

4.
We found an intra-acrosomal antigen of about 155,000 daltons (155 kDa) in a survey using the monoclonal antibody MC101 raised against mouse cauda epididymal spermatozoa. Morphological studies by means of indirect immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy localized the antigen to the cortex region of the anterior acrosome. Avidin biotin complex immunocytochemistry initially demonstrated a faint signal at the anterior acrosome in the testis spermatozoa that increased in intensity as the sperm moved toward the distal epididymis. This incremental immunoreactivity was also confirmed by immunoblotting following one-dimensional SDS-PAGE. The 155 kDa protein band was immunostained, and it was much more intense in the cauda epididymal than in the caput and corpus epididymal spermatozoa. Only a trace or no immunostain was evident in the caput or testis spermatozoa. The antigen localization did not change during passage through the epididymis, being confined at the cortex region of the anterior acrosome. The epididymal epithelial cells were not immunostained. These findings suggested that the 155 kDa protein is biochemically modified, further implying that the biochemical alteration of intra-acrosomal material is involved in sperm maturation in the epididymis. © 1995 wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
ADAM2 (fertilin β) is a sperm surface protein reported in several mammalian species. However, the presence of ADAM2 in the male reproductive system and sperm of the camel is not well known. The present study was to clarify the localization and expression of ADAM2 in the dromedary camel testis, epididymis and spermatozoa during rutting season using immunohistochemistry (IHC) and the quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Tissue samples were obtained from the testis (proximal and distal) and epididymis (caput, corpus, and cauda) from eight mature male camels. Epididymal and ejaculated sperms were collected from four other fertile camels. IHC analysis clearly showed the localization of ADAM2 protein in the spermatocytes and the round and elongated spermatids of the testis, in the epithelial cells along the epididymis tract, on the posterior head of the sperm within the cauda epididymis, and on the acrosomal cap of both the epididymal and ejaculated sperm. The expression of camel ADAM2 mRNA was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the testis when compared with the epididymis. These findings may suggest an important role of ADAM2 in the fertility of male dromedary camels.  相似文献   

6.
Changes in the number and distribution of spermatozoa in the epididymis of the adult brown marsupial mouse were examined during July/August in mated and unmated males. The effects of mating on epididymal sperm populations were studied in 2 groups of males each mated 3 times and compared with the number and distribution of spermatozoa in the epididymides of 4 unmated control groups. One testis and epididymis were removed from each animal (hemicastration) either before or early in the mating season to provide information on initial sperm content and distribution. The contralateral side was removed later in the mating season to examine the effects of mating or sexual abstinence on epididymal sperm distribution. Epididymal sperm number peaked in both the distal caput and distal corpus/proximal cauda epididymidis in late July. The total number of spermatozoa, including those remaining in the testis, available to each male at the beginning of the mating season in early August was approximately 4.4 x 10(6)/side. Although recruitment of spermatozoa into the epididymis from the testis continued until mid-August, sperm content of the epididymis reached a peak of about 3.5 x 10(6)/epididymis in early August. At this time approximately 0.9 x 10(6) spermatozoa remained in the testis which had ceased spermatogenic activity. Throughout the mating season, epididymal spermatozoa were concentrated in the distal corpus/proximal cauda regions of the epididymis and were replenished by spermatozoa from upper regions of the duct. Relatively few spermatozoa were found in the distal cauda epididymidis, confirming a low sperm storage capacity in this region. A constant loss of spermatozoa from the epididymis, probably via spermatorrhoea, occurred throughout the mating season and very few spermatozoa remained in unmated males in late August before the annual male die-off. Mating studies showed that an average of 0.23 x 10(6) spermatozoa/epididymis were delivered per mating in this species, but the number of spermatozoa released at each ejaculation may be as few as 0.04 x 10(6)/epididymis when sperm loss via spermatorrhoea is taken into account. We suggest that the unusual structure of the cauda epididymidis, which has a very restricted sperm storage capacity, may function to limit the numbers of spermatozoa available at each ejaculation and thus conserve the dwindling epididymal sperm reserves in order to maximize the number of successful matings which are possible during the mating season.  相似文献   

7.
We have identified an 80 kDa protein in ejaculated bull spermatozoa (p80) which is found in acrosomal and post-acrosomal areas of the head. It has a hyaluronidase activity and shares homologies with PH-20, a sperm surface glycoprotein involved in sperm-egg interaction. The aim of the present study was to characterize bull sperm p80 protein at the nucleic and amino acid levels to determine whether it is the bovine PH-20 ortholog. The complete nucleotide sequence determined by RT-PCR, 3' and 5' RACE show that bull p80, displays identity with the PH-20 nucleotide and amino acid sequences. Messenger RNA and protein expressions determined by Northern blot and immunohistochemistry revealed that the protein is testicular (expressed in spermatocytes and spermatids). The localization of p80 on spermatozoa, determined by indirect immunofluorescence using a monoclonal antibody, shows the protein in acrosomal and post acrosomal areas of the head with an increase in the signal intensity as sperm progress through the epididymis. Post-translational modifications of the protein were investigated during the epididymal maturation by Western blot on protein extracts from sperm collected in the caput, corpus and cauda portions of bull epididymis. Glycolysation status of sperm p80 protein on proteins from ejaculated and epididymidal sperm was investigated. Result show that the glycosylation status is modified as spermatozoa migrate through the epididymis. Hyaluronidase activity evaluated in protein extracts from spermatozoa of the three different epididymal sections revealed that the activity is higher at pH 7 than 4 and is not affected by epididymal maturation. These data strongly suggest that p80 is the bovine PH-20.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
A monoclonal antibody (MAb) raised against human sperm protein, designated YWK-II, was used to determine the distribution of antigens in rat spermatozoa and rat testicular germ cells. By an indirect immunofluorescent method, the antibody localized over the rat spermatozoal head, except for the postacrosomal region. In paraffin sections of adult and immature rat testis, germ cells, at every developmental stage, and Sertoli cells stained, while interstitial cells and peritubular myoid cells remained unstained. When cocultures of Sertoli and germ cells were tested, only the germ cells stained intensely. Sertoli cells and peritubular myoid cells in cultures did not stain. In the epididymal sections, strong staining occurred with spermatozoa in the lumen and epididymal epithelial cells, with moderate staining in the myoid layers of epididymis. To determine the sperm antigen interacting with the YWK-II antibody, rat spermatozoa proteins were prepared and analyzed by an immunoblot technique. The monoclonal antibody interacted with a single protein, with an estimated molecular weight of 115,000, present in the cauda epididymal spermatozoa. Among the proteins of the caput epididymal spermatozoa, however, the antibody interacted with a major and a minor band with molecular weights of 115,000 and 88,000, respectively. On the other hand, with proteins prepared from the membrane fraction of adult and immature rat testis, the antibody reacted with two bands with estimated molecular weights of 88,000 and 115,000. In the lysate prepared from germ cells dissociated from Sertoli-germ cell cocultures, the antibody recognized only the 88,000 protein. The present results show that the YWK-II MAb interacts with two proteins with different molecular weights. The amount of the interacting proteins in spermatozoa varied with their location within the epididymis.  相似文献   

10.
During their epididymal maturation, stabilizing factors such as cholesterol sulfate are associated with the sperm plasma membrane. Cholesterol is sulfated in epididymal spermatozoa by the enzyme estrogen sulfotransferase. Because of its role in the efflux of sulfate conjugates formed intracellularly by sulfotransferases, the ATP-binding cassette membrane transporter G2 (ABCG2) might have a role in the translocation of this compound across the plasma membrane. In the present study we showed that ABCG2 is present in the plasma membrane overlaying the acrosomal region of spermatozoa recovered from testis, epididymis, and after ejaculation. Although ABCG2 is also present in epididymosomes, the transporter is not transferred to spermatozoa via this mechanism. Furthermore, although epididymal sperm ABCG2 was shown to be functional, as determined by its ability to extrude Hoechst 33342 in the presence of the specific inhibitor Fumitremorgin C, ABCG2 present in ejaculated sperm was found to be nonfunctional. Additional experiments demonstrated that phosphorylation of ABCG2 tyrosyl residues, but not its localization in lipid rafts, is the mechanism responsible for its functionality. Dephosphorylation of ABCG2 in ejaculated spermatozoa is proposed to cause a partial protein relocalization to other intracellular compartments. Prostasomes are proposed to have a role in this process because incubation with this fraction of seminal plasma induces a decrease in the amount of ABCG2 in the associated sperm membrane fraction. These results demonstrate that ABCG2 plays a role in epididymal sperm maturation, but not after ejaculation. The loss of ABCG2 function after ejaculation is proposed to be regulated by prostasomes.  相似文献   

11.
12.
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   

13.
Spermatozoa acquire their motility and fertilizing ability during their passage through the epididymal canal. In the epididymal caput and corpus spermatozoa undergo several biochemical and metabolic changes while the cauda of the epididymis should be considered as the primarily site for storage of the spermatozoa. In the horse spermatozoa from cauda epididymis were collected and frozen, and the fertility of semen assessed. However, no studies have detailed semen characteristics of spermatozoa collected from the cauda epididymis in the jackass. In this study sperm characteristics of spermatozoa in the cauda epididymis of the donkey was reported and a comparison with ejaculated spermatozoal characteristics was performed. Samples from 10 Martina Franca jackasses were collected and analyzed for viability (Propidium iodide/Sybr-14? fluorescent stain), mitochondrial activity (Mitotraker? fluorescent stain), objective motility characteristics (by Computer Assisted Sperm Analyzer - CASA) and morphology. A higher viability and mitochondrial activity in the cauda epididymis samples were reported in this paper. Samples reported in this paper were identified and the percentage of total and progressive spermatozoa was comparable, but trajectories were more rapid (higher VCL) with less progressiveness (higher ALH and lower STR and LIN) in the cauda epididymis. Sperm morphology showed a pronounced variability between jackasses, with comparable values for all morphological subclasses. In this study the loss of the distal cytoplasmic droplets happen close to or after ejaculation because the percentage fell to nearly 0% after ejaculation. As suggested for bulls, the presence of a similar percentage in sperm with proximal cytoplasmic droplet in epididymal and ejaculated semen is likely to indicate a failure in the maturation process.  相似文献   

14.
Serum designated as IS obtained from a young healthy infertile woman induced a head-to-head agglutination of ejaculated boar sperm. The immunoglobulin G (IgG) prepared from IS localized to the acrosomal region of the sperm head obtained from the corpus and cauda epididymis as determined by an indirect immunofluorescent method. The IgG interacted with a boar sperm protein with an estimated molecular weight of 45-kDa, determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic (SDS-PAGE) immunoblotting technique. However, the IgG did not interact with proteins extracted from sperm obtained from the testis and caput epididymis or from non-gonadal tissues including liver, kidney, spleen, muscle and serum. The IgG interacted with additional proteins of about 75- and 38-kDa present in the corpus and cauda epididymal fluids but not those in the caput epididymal fluid. The staining intensity of the 75-kDa band was reduced and that of the 38-kDa was nullified with ejaculated seminal plasma proteins. The interacting proteins were adsorbed when chromatographed on Concanavalin A Sepharose column, suggesting that they are glycoproteins.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Changes of chromosomal basic proteins of rats have been followed during transformation of spermatids into spermatozoa in the testis and during maturation of spermatozoa in the epididymis. Rat testis chromatin has been fractionated on the basis of differing sensitivity to shearing, yielding a soluble fraction and a condensed fraction. The sperm histone is found in the condense fraction. Somatic-type histones are found in both fractions. The somatic-type histones in the condensed fraction contains much more lysine-rich histone I, than does the somatic-type histones in the soluble fraction. This may suggest that the lysine-rich histone I is the last histone to be displaced during the replacement of somatic-type histones by sperm histone. After extensive shearing followed by sucrose centrifugation, the condensed portion of testis chromatin can be further fractionated into two morphologically distinctive fractions. One is a heavy fraction possessing an elongated shape typical of the head of late spermatids. The other is a light fraction which is presumably derived from spermatids at earlier stages of chromatin condensation and which is seen as a beaded structure in the light microscope. Sperm histone of testis chromatin can be extractable completely by guanidinium chloride without a thiol, wheras 2-mercaptoethanol is required for extraction of sperm histone from caput and cauda epididymal spermatozoa. The light fraction of the condensed testis chromatin contains unmodified and monophospho-sperm histone. The sperm histones of the heavy fraction is mainly of monophospho and diphospho species, whereas unmodified and monophosphosperm histones are found in caput and cauda epididymal spermatozoa. Labeling of cysteine sulfhydryl groups of sperm histone releases by 2-mercaptoethanol treatment shows that essentially all of the cysteine residues of sperm histone in testis chromatin are present as sulfhydryl groups, while those of sperm histone isolated from mature (cauda epididymal) spermatozoa are present as disulfide forms and approximately 50% of the cysteine residues of sperm histone obtained from caput epididymal spermatozoa are in disulfide forms. These results suggest that phosphorylation of sperm histone is involved in the process of chromatin condensation during transformation of spermatozoa in the epididymis.  相似文献   

17.
Epididymal semen is being more often considered as a potential source of valuable genes for genome resource banks. To utilize this resource as efficiently as possible, storage and freezing fertility and preservation characteristics of epididymal semen have to be examined. Because semen quality should be assessed as objectively as possible, we introduced computer assisted sperm analysis (CASA) of epididymal bull semen. The aims of this study were: to determine the quality of fresh cauda epididymal bull sperm, conventionally and by CASA (Hamilton-Thorne Ceros 12.1); to compare epididymal sperm movement with the motion characteristics of ejaculated semen; and to investigate whether equality of semen characteristics exists between both caudae epididymides of the same bull. In experiment 1, it is shown that epididymal sperm has a lower motility (total: 48.7% versus 79.9%, p < 0.0001 and progressive: 34.4% versus 58.4%, p < 0.0001) and moves less straight (80.5% versus 84.5%, p < 0.0009) with a higher amplitude (6.1 microm versus 5.0 microm, p < 0.0001) than ejaculated semen. The epididymal straight line velocity (85.2 microm/s versus 98.3 microm/s, p < 0.0001) is lower, but the curvilinear velocity (173.5 microm/s versus 156.4 microm/s, p < 0.0001) is higher than those of ejaculated semen. The data in experiment 2 are analysed to determine equality, rather than to find a difference. They illustrate that mean differences, for most semen parameters, between the semen from paired caudae epididymides, deviated more than 20% from the average values of these parameters from all bulls; the exceptions (those parameters within 20% of the average for all bulls) were the percentage of live spermatozoa, the linearity of sperm movement, the weights of testis and epididymis, the weights of the cauda epididymis alone, the volumes, and the amplitudes of movement of the semen (p < 0.05). The mean differences between the percentage of live spermatozoa and the amplitude of movement of the epididymal semen of both epididymides of one bull, were the only values smaller than 10% of the average value of this parameter (p < 0.05). This implies that sperm from one cauda epididymis should not be used as a control for the other because, for most of the semen parameters (concentration, morphology, motility, and beat cross frequency), equality between caudae epididymides of the same bull could not be established.  相似文献   

18.
Immunocytochemical localization of DJ-1 in human male reproductive tissue   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
DJ-1 was identified as an activated ras-dependent oncogene product, and was also found to be an infertility-related protein (contraception-associated protein 1; CAP 1) that was reduced in rat spermatozoa treated with ornidazole, one of the endocrine disrupting substances that causes reversible infertility in rats. CAP 1 is present in spermatozoa but is not detectable in the epididymal fluid of fertile rats and appears to be shed from sperm during treatment with ornidazole. To determine the functions of DJ-1 in the human reproductive system as a target protein of endocrine active substances, we identified the localization of DJ-1 in human testis, epididymis, ejaculated spermatozoa, and seminal plasma. DJ-1 was present in cells existing in the seminiferous tubules and Leydig cells. Some strong expressions were observed in Leydig cells and Sertoli cells, suggesting a relation with spermatogenesis via androgen receptor (AR). In ejaculated spermatozoa, DJ-1 existed on the surface of the posterior part of head and the anterior part of the midpiece. DJ-1 was also present on sperm flagella when the antibody penetrated the plasma membrane, suggesting that there are two putative roles in fertilization, one is binding to the egg, and the other is flagella movement. In contrast to previous findings, we detected DJ-1 in seminal plasma of fertile men. These results demonstrate that DJ-1 in human seminal plasma is not only from spermatozoa but also from the testis and epididymis. It is suggested that DJ-1 may play an important and as yet uncharacterized role in spermatogenesis and fertilization in humans.  相似文献   

19.
Prothymosin α (PTMA) is a highly acidic intrinsically unstructured protein. Its expression in male gonads is evolutionary conserved; in rat testis it is specifically localized in the cytoplasm of post‐meiotic germ cells, in association with the developing acrosome system. In the present paper we investigated on PTMA localization inside the head of mammalian spermatozoa (SPZ). We chose a confocal approach to ascertain whether PTMA is expressed in the acrosome or in the perinuclear theca, two regions that are tightly linked and partially overlapped in the mature haploid cells. The obtained results showed that PTMA is specifically localized in the acrosome of rat epididymal SPZ; the same experimental approach evidenced, for the first time, PTMA presence in human ejaculated SPZ. A Western blot analysis on protein extracts from human sperm head fractions confirmed the confocal data and demonstrated that the peptide is specifically associated with the inner acrosomal membrane fraction. Finally, when the acrosome reaction was induced in vitro by progesterone treatment on both rat and human sperm, PTMA signal was retained in the apical region of reacted SPZ. In conclusion, this study confirms the conservation of PTMA distribution in vertebrate male gametes and strongly supports a role for this polypeptide in their physiology. J. Cell. Physiol. 228: 1629–1637, 2013. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号