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1.
Hyperactivated motility, a swimming pattern of mammalian sperm in the oviduct, is essential for fertilization in vivo. It is characterized by high-amplitude flagellar waves and, usually, highly asymmetrical flagellar beating. It had been suggested, but not tested, that Ca2+ and cAMP switch on hyperactivation by directly affecting the flagellar axoneme. In this study, the direct affects of these agents on the axoneme were tested by using detergent-demembranated bull sperm. As confirmed by TEM, treatment of sperm with 0.2% Triton X-100 disrupted the plasma, acrosomal, and inner mitochondrial membranes, leaving axonemes intact. In the presence of 2 mM ATP, the percentage of reactivated sperm that were hyperactivated increased to 80% when free Ca2+ was increased from 50 to 400 nM. The effect of the Ca2+ in this range was to increase beat asymmetry by increasing the curvature of the principal bend. No additional increases were observed above 400 nM free Ca2+, but motility was suppressed at 1 mM. The ability of Ca2+ to produce hyperactivation depended on ATP availability, such that more ATP was required to produce the high amplitude flagellar bends characteristic of hyperactivated motility than to produce activated motility. Cyclic AMP was not required for reactivation, nor for hyperactivation. Production of hyperactivated motility also required an alkaline environment (pH 7.9-8.5). These results suggest that, provided sufficient ATP is present and pH is sufficiently alkaline, Ca2+ switches on hyperactivation by enabling curvature of the principal bends to increase.  相似文献   

2.
In order to fertilize, mammalian sperm must hyperactivate. Hyperactivation is triggered by increased flagellar Ca(2+), which switches flagellar beating from a symmetrical to an asymmetrical pattern by increasing bending to one side. Thimerosal, which releases Ca(2+) from internal stores, induced hyperactivation in mouse sperm within seconds, even when extracellular Ca(2+) was buffered with BAPTA to approximately 30 nM. In sperm from CatSper1 or CatSper2 null mice, which lack functional flagellar alkaline-activated calcium currents, 50 microM thimerosal raised the flagellar bend amplitudes from abnormally low levels to normal pre-hyperactivated levels and, in 20-40% of sperm, induced hyperactivation. Addition of 1 mM Ni(2+) diminished the response. This suggests that intracellular Ca(2+) is abnormally low in the null sperm flagella. When intracellular Ca(2+) was reduced by BAPTA-AM in wild-type sperm, they exhibited flagellar beat patterns more closely resembling those of null sperm. Altogether, these results indicate that extracellular Ca(2+) is required to supplement store-released Ca(2+) to produce maximal and sustained hyperactivation and that CatSper1 and CatSper2 are key elements of the major Ca(2+) entry pathways that support not only hyperactivated motility but possibly also normal pre-hyperactivated motility.  相似文献   

3.
Hyperactivated motility, a swimming pattern displayed by mammalian sperm in the oviduct around the time of ovulation, is essential to fertilization. Ca(2+) has been shown to be crucial for the initiation and maintenance of hyperactivated motility. Nevertheless, how Ca(2+) reaches the axoneme in the core of the flagellum to switch on hyperactivation is unknown. Ca(2+)-releasing agents were used to determine whether an intracellular store provides Ca(2+) to the axoneme. Hyperactivation was induced immediately in bull sperm by thapsigargin, caffeine, and thimerosal. The responses were dose-dependent and were induced in both capacitated and uncapacitated sperm. When external Ca(2+) was buffered below 50 nM with 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, the response to caffeine was significantly reduced; however, the responses to thapsigargin and thimerosal were not affected. This indicates caffeine-induced hyperactivation depends on external Ca(2+) influx, whereas hyperactivation by thapsigargin and thimerosal do not. Acrosome reactions were not induced by these treatments; therefore, an acrosomal store was probably not involved. Indirect immunofluorescence labeling showed type I inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP(3)R) in the acrosome and neck region, but no ryanodine receptors (RyR) were found using anti-RyR antibodies or BODIPY FL-X ryanodine. These data indicate that there is an IP(3)R-gated Ca(2+) store in the neck region of sperm that regulates hyperactivated motility.  相似文献   

4.
Hyperactivated motility is observed among sperm in the mammalian oviduct near the time of ovulation. It is characterized by high-amplitude, asymmetrical flagellar beating and assists sperm in penetrating the cumulus oophorus and zona pellucida. Elevated intracellular Ca2+ is required for the initiation of hyperactivated motility, suggesting that calmodulin (CALM) and Ca2+/CALM-stimulated pathways are involved. A demembranated sperm model was used to investigate the role of CALM in promoting hyperactivation. Ejaculated bovine sperm were demembranated and immobilized by brief exposure to Triton X-100. Motility was restored by addition of reactivation medium containing MgATP and Ca2+, and hyperactivation was observed as free Ca2+ was increased from 50 nM to 1 microM. However, when 2.5 mM Ca2+ was added to the demembranation medium to extract flagellar CALM, motility was not reactivated unless exogenous CALM was readded. The inclusion of anti-CALM IgG in the reactivation medium reduced the proportion hyperactivated in 1 microM Ca2+ to 5%. Neither control IgG, the CALM antagonist W-7, nor a peptide directed against the CALM-binding domain of myosin light chain kinase (MYLK2) inhibited hyperactivation. However, when sperm were reactivated in the presence of CALM kinase II (CAMK2) inhibiting peptides, hyperactivation was reduced by 75%. Furthermore, an inhibitor of CAMK2, KN-93, inhibited hyperactivation without impairing normal motility of intact sperm. CALM and CAMK2 were immunolocalized to the acrosomal region and flagellum. These results indicate that hyperactivation is stimulated by a Ca2+/CALM pathway involving CAMK2.  相似文献   

5.
Hyperactivated motility was studied in guinea pig spermatozoa. In the presence of the local anesthetic procaine, a high number of sperm cells (64%) showed hyperactivation when incubated in minimal culture medium with pyruvate, lactate, and glucose. Hyperactivated motility was dependent on glucose in the medium. Sperm ATP concentration was increased twofold in hyperactivated sperm when compared to procaine-treated nonhyperactivated cells. cAMP levels were also higher in hyperactivated cells than in control spermatozoa. Thus, in living spermatozoa high levels of ATP appear to be needed to generate hyperactivation. cAMP is present at a high concentration in hyperactivated spermatozoa, therefore a role of cAMP in hyperactivation cannot be excluded. Depletion of external Ca2+ did not inhibit procaine-induced hyperactivated motility. Hence, procaine canceled the requirement of external Ca2+ for sperm to express hyperactivated motility. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
Free Ca2+ changes the curvature of epididymal rat sperm flagella in demembranated sperm models. The radius of curvature of the flagellar midpiece region was measured and found to be a continuous function of the free Ca2+ concentration. Below 10(-7) M free Ca2+, the sperm flagella assumed a pronounced curvature in the same direction as the sperm head. The curvature reversed direction at 2.5 x 10(-6) M Ca2+ to assume a tight, hook-like bend at concentrations of 10(-5) to 10(-4) M free Ca2+. Sodium vanadate at 2 x 10(-6) M blocked flagellar motility, but did not inhibit the Ca2+-mediated change in curvature. Nickel ion at 0.2 mM and cadmium ion at 1 microM interfered with the transition and induced the low Ca2+ configuration of the flagellum. The forces that maintain the Ca2+-dependent curvature are locally produced, as dissection of the flagella into segments did not significantly alter the curvature of the excised portions. Irrespective of the induced pattern of curvature, the sperm exhibited coordinated, repetitive flagellar beating in the presence of ATP and cAMP. At 0.3 mM ATP the flagellar waves propagated along the principal piece while the level of free Ca2+ controlled the overall curvature. When Ca2+-treated sperm models with hooked midpieces were subjected to higher concentrations of ATP (1-5 mM), some cells exhibited a pattern of movement similar to hyperactivated motility in capacitated live sperm. This type of motility involved repetitive reversals of the Ca2+-induced bend in the midpiece, as well as waves propagated along the principal piece. The free Ca2+ available to the flagellum therefore appeared to modify both the pattern of motility and the flagellar curvature.  相似文献   

7.
Digital image analysis of the flagellar movements of cynomolgus macaque spermatozoa hyperactivated by caffeine and cAMP was carried out to understand the change in flagellar movements during hyperactivation. The degree of flagellar bending increased remarkably after hyperactivation, especially at the base of the midpiece. Mainly two beating patterns were seen in the hyperactivated monkey sperm flagella: remarkably asymmetrical flagellar bends of large amplitude and relatively symmetrical flagellar bends of large amplitude. The asymmetrical bends were often seen in the early stage of hyperactivation, whereas the symmetrical bends executed nonprogressive, figure-of-eight movement. Beat frequency of the hyperactivated spermatozoa significantly decreased while wavelength of flagellar waves roughly doubled. To determine the conditions under which the axonemes of hyperactivated sperm flagella have asymmetrical or symmetrical bends, the plasma membranes of monkey spermatozoa were extracted with Triton X-100 and motility was reactivated with MgATP(2-) under various conditions. The asymmetrical flagellar bends were brought about by Ca(2+), whereas the symmetrical flagellar bends resulted from low levels of Ca(2+) and high levels of cAMP. Under these conditions, beat frequency and wavelength of flagellar waves of demembranated, reactivated spermatozoa were similar to those of the hyperactivated spermatozoa. These results suggest that during hyperactivation of monkey spermatozoa intracellular Ca(2+) concentrations first rise, and then decrease while cAMP concentrations increase simultaneously.  相似文献   

8.
Sperm hyperactivated motility is characterized by high flagellar bend amplitude and asymmetrical beating, which are detected by computer-assisted sperm motility analysis as increased curvilinear velocity and lateral head movement. It is required for sperm penetration of the oocyte zona pellucida during fertilization and is induced by an increase in flagellar Ca(2+). Our objective was to determine whether pH plays a role in promoting Ca signaling of hyperactivated motility. The cell-permeant weak base NH(4)Cl increased curvilinear velocity and amplitude of lateral head movement of bovine sperm, indicative of hyperactivation. Fluorometric recordings of sperm loaded with BCECF-AM or fluo3-AM, revealed that NH(4)Cl evoked elevations of intracellular pH and Ca(2+), respectively, with the rise in pH occurring more rapidly than that of Ca(2+). Single-cell image analysis showed increased Ca(2+) levels in the flagellum in response to NH(4)Cl. When extracellular Ca(2+) was lowered with BAPTA (1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid) prior to treatment with NH(4)Cl, intracellular pH was increased, but elevation of Ca(2+) and hyperactivation were diminished. This suggests that the rise in intracellular pH precedes an influx of Ca(2+). The Ca(2+) channel blocker Ni(2+) also diminished NH(4)Cl stimulation of hyperactivation, demonstrating that Ca(2+) entry is required for maximal expression of hyperactivation. Ca(2+) ionophore produced an increase in Ca(2+) that was 3-fold greater than that produced by NH(4)Cl; however, it produced a weaker hyperactivation response. These results indicate that a rise in pH increases intracellular Ca(2+)and promotes hyperactivation primarily by stimulating Ca(2+) influx, but also by other mechanisms.  相似文献   

9.
Despite extensive study of sperm motility, little is known of the mechanism of mammalian sperm hyperactivation. Here we describe a novel method for preparation of rodent sperm flagella and use it to show a correlation between tyrosine phosphorylation of flagellar proteins and hyperactivation of hamster sperm. When hyperactivation was produced by a 3.5-h incubation in a medium supporting capacitation, four major tyrosine-phosphorylated peptides of 90-, 80-, 62-, and 48-kDa mass were detected in flagellar extracts. Incubation with calyculin A, an inhibitor of protein phosphatases 1 and 2A, produced hyperactivation within 40 min but only a single 80-kDa phosphotyrosine-containing flagellar component. Conversely, incubation with inhibitors of either protein kinase A (H8) or protein tyrosine kinase (tyrphostin 47) prevented both hyperactivation and the production of tyrosine-phosphorylated flagellar peptides. These results indicate a strong correlation of hyperactivation with the tyrosine phosphorylation of sperm flagellar peptides, and they strongly implicate an 80-kDa component as a major mediator of the mechanism that produces hyperactivated motility of hamster sperm.  相似文献   

10.
Hyperactivated sperm motility is characterized by high-amplitude and asymmetrical flagellar beating that assists sperm in penetrating the oocyte zona pellucida. Other functional changes in sperm, such as activation of motility and capacitation, involve cross talk between the cAMP/PKA and tyrosine kinase/phosphatase signaling pathways. Our objective was to determine the role of the cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) signaling pathway in hyperactivation. Western blot analyses of detergent extracts of whole sperm and flagella were performed using antiphosphotyrosine antibody. Bull sperm capacitated by 10 microg/ml heparin and/or 1 mM dibutyryl-cAMP plus 100 microM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine exhibited increased protein tyrosine phosphorylation without becoming hyperactivated. Procaine (5 mM) or caffeine (10 mM) immediately induced hyperactivation in nearly 100% of motile sperm but did not increase protein tyrosine phosphorylation. After 4 h of incubation with caffeine, sperm expressed capacitation-associated protein tyrosine phosphorylation but hyperactivation was significantly reduced. Sperm initially hyperactivated by procaine or caffeine remained hyperactivated for at least 4 h in the presence of Rp-cAMPS (cAMP antagonist) or PKA inhibitors H-89 or H-8. Pretreatment with inhibitors also failed to block induction of hyperactivation; however, the inhibitors did block protein tyrosine phosphorylation when sperm were incubated with capacitating agents, thereby verifying inhibition of the cAMP/PKA pathway. While induction of hyperactivation did not depend on cAMP/PKA, it did require extracellular Ca(2+). These findings indicate that hyperactivation is mediated by a Ca(2+) signaling pathway that is separate or divergent from the pathway associated with acquisition of acrosomal responsiveness and does not involve protein tyrosine phosphorylation downstream of the actions of procaine or caffeine.  相似文献   

11.
Rat sperm from the cauda epididymis exhibit increased motility, longevity, and a distinct circular pattern of flagellar curvature in response to 5 mM procaine-HCl or 0.1 mM 8-(N,N-diethylamino)-octyl-3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate (TMB-8), reagents that are thought to play a role in the immobilization of free cellular calcium. Triton X-100-extracted sperm models will exhibit the same pattern of motility and curvature as procaine- or TMB-8-activated cells, but only when calcium is removed by a strong chelating agent, and in the presence of cAMP (3 microM). Demembranated sperm models produced from epididymal rat sperm are quiescent unless cAMP is added. In these sperm models, the presence or absence of free calcium mediates a transition in flagellar curvature. The increased activity of the procaine-treated intact cells was not accompanied by a change in cellular ATP content, nor was ATP availability the limiting factor in the quiescent sperm. Therefore, the increased motility produced by procaine is probably mediated by a fall in free intracellular Ca2+ accompanied by a rise in cAMP. Our finding that calcium controls the curvature of sperm flagella may explain altered patterns of flagellar beating, such as the hyperactivated motility that sperm exhibit in the female reproductive tract.  相似文献   

12.
Many Ca(2+) channel proteins have been detected in mammalian sperm, but only the four CATSPER channels have been clearly shown to be required for male fertility. Ca(2+) entry through the principal piece-localized CATSPER channels has been implicated in the activation of hyperactivated motility. In the present study, we show that the Ca(2+) entry also triggers a tail-to-head Ca(2+) propagation in the mouse sperm. When activated with 8-Br-cAMP, 8-Br-cGMP, or alkaline depolarization, a CATSPER-dependent increase in intracellular Ca(2+) concentration starts in the principal piece, propagates through the midpiece, and reaches the head in a few seconds. The Ca(2+) propagation through the midpiece leads to a Ca(2+)-dependent increase in NADH fluorescence. In addition, CatSper1-mutant sperm have lower intracellular ATP levels than wild-type sperm. Thus, a Ca(2+) influx in the principal piece through CATSPER channels can not only initiate hyperactivated motility, but can also trigger a tail-to-head Ca(2+) propagation that leads to an increase in [NADH] and may regulate ATP homeostasis.  相似文献   

13.
Hyperactivation in mammalian sperm is characterized by highly asymmetrical waveforms and an increase in the amplitude of flagellar bends. It is important for the sperm to be able to achieve hyperactivated motility in order to reach and fertilize the egg. Calcium (Ca2+) dynamics are known to play a large role in the initiation and maintenance of hyperactivated motility. Here we present an integrative model that couples the CatSper channel mediated Ca2+ dynamics of hyperactivation to a mechanical model of an idealized sperm flagellum in a 3-d viscous, incompressible fluid. The mechanical forces are due to passive stiffness properties and active bending moments that are a function of the local Ca2+ concentration along the length of the flagellum. By including an asymmetry in bending moments to reflect an asymmetry in the axoneme's response to Ca2+, we capture the transition from activated motility to hyperactivated motility. We examine the effects of elastic properties of the flagellum and the Ca2+ dynamics on the overall swimming patterns. The swimming velocities of the model flagellum compare well with data for hyperactivated mouse sperm.  相似文献   

14.
Protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation are believed to play key roles in regulation of sperm motility. Here we examine the effect of temperature on hamster sperm motility and protein tyrosine phosphorylation status. As in previous work, a decrease from 37 degrees C to 22 degrees C caused loss of hyperactivated motility. We now find that cooling also produces a dephosphorylation of several 48-80-kDa flagellar peptides. A return to 37 degrees C restored hyperactivation but resulted in rephosphorylation of only an 80-kDa protein. Conversely, hyperactivation and phosphorylation of the 80-kDa component were insensitive to incubation temperature for sperm incubated with the protein phosphatase inhibitor, calyculin A, or for sperm demembranated by detergent extraction. These results strongly indicate that the temperature-sensitive tyrosine phosphorylation status of an 80-kDa sperm flagellar peptide explains the sensitivity of hyperactivation to temperature.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The transformation of hamster sperm motility during capacitation in vitro and during maturation in the caudal epididymis was analyzed and compared using videomicrography. Sperm recovered from the distal portion of the caudal epididymis, as well as ejaculated sperm recovered from the uterus exhibited low amplitude, planar flagellar beating. By 3 hr of incubation under capacitating conditions, the caudal epididymal sperm were swimming in helical patterns apparently produced by significantly increased acuteness of flagellar bending and by torsion seen as abrupt, periodic turning of the head. By 4 hr, most sperm were hyperactivated, swimming in circles resulting from asymmetrical, planar flagellar bending that was significantly more acute than the preceding patterns. When motility parameters of fresh sperm were compared with those of sperm swimming in the transitional helical pattern and with hyperactivated sperm, transitional sperm had significantly higher net and average path velocities than the others, indicating that they covered space at the greatest rate. This suggests that the transitional phase plays an important role in sperm transport. Sperm recovered from the proximal region of the caudal epididymis, near the corpus, swam in either the helical or hyperactivated patterns, or a mixture of the two. The means of their flagellar curvature ratios and linear indices were intermediate between helical and hyperactivated mean values. Thus, sperm undergoing final maturation in the caudal epididymis reverse the pattern of development of hyperactivation. Also, the development of hyperactivated motility must therefore entail induction of a preexisting potential for flagellar movement, rather than a maturational process.  相似文献   

17.
An earlier study demonstrated that rabbit sperm incubated for 16 hr under capacitation conditions acquire motility patterns identical to those seen in rabbit sperm capacitated in vivo. We now show that similar motion patterns develop after 0.5 hr incubation in a Trisbuffered medium, medium M. Development and decline of the motion patterns occurred in three phases each recognized by the character of the biphasic motion patterns. Hyperactivated sperm were objectively identified and quantified by a previously developed computer-directed model. The percentage of motile sperm that acquired hyperactivated motility and the period they remained in this state varied among sperm from different rabbits. The decline in hyperactivated motility was paralleled by a decrease in the average sperm curvilinear velocity (VCL) and average amplitude of lateral head displacement (AALH), but was not accompanied by a concomitant decrease in percentage of motile sperm. Pb2+ and Cd2+, at concentrations that did not inhibit motility, prevented development of hyperactivated motility. Inhibition of hyperactivated motility by Pb2+ was time- and concentration-dependent; the average percentage of hyperactivated sperm decreased from ~ 30% to<5% (n = 5) in 1 hr at a Pb2+ concentration of 25 μM. Cd2+ inhibition of hyperactivation was dependent only on concentration of the cation. At a concentration of 100 μM, the decrease in the percent of hyperactivated sperm was ~ 50% (n = 3). Hg2+, Zn2+, and Cr6+ at sublethal concentrations had no effect on hyperactivated motility development. These results suggest that Pb2+ and Cd2+, by virtue of their ability to prevent the wide curvature flagella beating that is characteristic of hyperactivation, can compromise fertilization at concentrations that do not inhibit sperm motility and act as a reproductive toxicant at a level other than spermatogenesis. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence for the function of hyperactivated motility in sperm   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
After insemination, mammalian sperm undergo a striking change in flagellar beat pattern, termed hyperactivation. In low-viscosity culture medium, nonhyperactivated sperm flagella generate relatively symmetrical, low-amplitude waves, while hyperactivated sperm flagella generate an asymetrical beating pattern that results in nonprogressive movement. Since sperm encounter highly viscous and viscoelastic fluids in the female reproductive tract, the progress of hyperactivated sperm was compared with that of nonhyperactivated and transitional sperm in media of increasing viscosity. Hamster sperm obtained from the caudal epididymis were incubated in a medium that promotes capacitation. After 0, 3, and 4 h of incubation, the majority of the sperm exhibited, respectively, activated, transitional, and hyperactivated motility. At each of these time points, aliquots of sperm were removed from incubation and added to solutions of 0, 5%, 10%, 20%, and 30% Ficoll in medium. Samples containing mostly hyperactivated sperm (4 h) maintained higher swimming and flagellar velocities and were able to generate greater forces in response to increased viscous loading than activated sperm (0 h). Transitional sperm (3 h) showed an intermediate response. The paths of hyperactivated sperm through solutions of 20% and 30% Ficoll were considerably straighter than those made through medium alone. This is the first demonstration that hyperactivation can confer a mechanical advantage upon sperm in the oviduct where they may encounter viscous oviductal fluid and a viscoelastic cumulus matrix.  相似文献   

19.
The reversibility of hyperactivated motility was tested in caudal epididymal mouse sperm by treating them with 1 microM calcium ionophore A23187 in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), followed 2 min later by the addition of medium containing high levels of bovine serum albumin (BSA) (final concentrations: 0.5 microM A23187, 22 mg/ml BSA). Controls received DMSO alone, followed by BSA. Immediately following treatment with A23187, motility was weak and vibratory. Two minutes after the addition of high levels of BSA, motility was hyperactivated, as determined by videotape analysis of linearity of trajectory and acuteness of flagellar bending. Ten minutes after the addition, the movement pattern returned to that of fresh, uncapacitated epididymal sperm. Control sperm retained the linear swimming pattern of fresh caudal epididymal sperm during the 10 min of observation. Ninety minutes later, however, both control and treated sperm became hyperactivated. The percentage of motile sperm was not affected by treatment or time. Thus, ionophore-induced hyperactivation is reversible and does not interfere with the normal development of hyperactivation during incubation under capacitating conditions in vitro.  相似文献   

20.
Hyperactivation, a swimming pattern of mammalian sperm in the oviduct, is essential for fertilization. It is characterized by asymmetrical flagellar beating and an increase of cytoplasmic Ca(2+). We observed that some mouse sperm swimming in the oviduct produce high-amplitude pro-hook bends (bends in the direction of the hook on the head), whereas other sperm produce high-amplitude anti-hook bends. Switching direction of the major bends could serve to redirect sperm toward oocytes. We hypothesized that different Ca(2+) signaling pathways produce high-amplitude pro-hook and anti-hook bends. In vitro, sperm that hyperactivated during capacitation (because of activation of CATSPER plasma membrane Ca(2+) channels) developed high-amplitude pro-hook bends. The CATSPER activators procaine and 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) also induced high-amplitude pro-hook bends. Thimerosal, which triggers a Ca(2+) release from internal stores, induced high-amplitude anti-hook bends. Activation of CATSPER channels is facilitated by a pH rise, so both Ca(2+) and pH responses to treatments with 4-AP and thimerosal were monitored. Thimerosal triggered a Ca(2+) increase that initiated at the base of the flagellum, whereas 4-AP initiated a rise in the proximal principal piece. Only 4-AP triggered a flagellar pH rise. Proteins were extracted from sperm for examination of phosphorylation patterns induced by Ca(2+) signaling. Procaine and 4-AP induced phosphorylation of proteins on threonine and serine, whereas thimerosal primarily induced dephosphorylation of proteins. Tyrosine phosphorylation was unaffected. We concluded that hyperactivation, which is associated with capacitation, can be modulated by release of Ca(2+) from intracellular stores to reverse the direction of the dominant flagellar bend and, thus, redirect sperm.  相似文献   

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