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A possible mechanism of action for fertilization promoting peptide,a TRH-related tripeptide that promotes capacitation and fertilizing ability in mammalian spermatozoa
Authors:C.M. Green  S.M. Cockle  P.F. Watson  L.R. Fraser
Abstract:Fertilization promoting peptide (FPP), a tripeptide structurally related to thyrotrophin releasing hormone (TRH), has been shown to stimulate capacitation and fertilizing ability in both mouse and human spermatozoa, but the mechanisms of action involved in these responses are currently unknown. In the present study utilizing epididymal mouse spermatozoa, we have compared the ability of FPP, TRH, and pyroglutamylphenylalanineprolineamide (an uncharged structurally related tripeptide found in seminal plasma) to stimulate capacitation. At 50 nM, the mean concentration of FPP found in human seminal plasma, only FPP produced a significant response. This suggests that if a receptor is involved, it is one distinct from the TRH receptor. A significant response to FPP required the presence of extracellular Ca2+, with 90 μm Ca2+ being sufficient to support a stimulation of capacitation. The addition of FPP to suspensions at later stages of capacitation indicated that the nature of the response changed, such that addition of FPP to capacitated suspensions inhibited spontaneous acrosome reactions; however, FPP-treated, cells were still able to undergo acrosomal exocytosis in response to progesterone, a physiological agonist of acrosomal exocytosis. Because earlier studies had identified a similar capacitation-related change in response to adenosine, being stimulatory early in capacitation and inhibitory later in capacitation, we investigated the possibility that FPP and adenosine might be acting via the same pathway. The combination of FPP plus adenosine, whether used at low, non-stimulatory concentrations or high, maximally-stimulatory concentrations, was more effective in promoting capacitation than either compound used individually. As observed with FPP, addition of adenosine to capacitated cells inhibited spontaneous acrosome loss but did not inhibit exocytosis in response to progesterone. This suggests that the two molecules are affecting a common pathway. Since adenosine, acting via specific cell surface receptors, can stimulate fertilizing ability and adenylate cyclase activity in uncapacitated cells and then inhibit enzyme activity in capacitated cells, we propose that FPP may act by modulating the adenylate cyclase/cyclic AMP signal transduction pathway. In vivo, FPP, which would contact spermatozoa at ejaculation and probably remain bound to cells for some time, could stimulate capacitation as the spermatozoa ascend the female tract; adenosine, present in seminal plasma and the female tract, could either augment FPP's action or replace it if FPP is lost from the cell surface. We therefore suggest that FPP and adenosine, by modulating adenylate cyclase activity to promote capacitation but inhibit spontaneous acrosomal exocytosis, may provide an endogenous mechanism that helps to optimize the fertilizing potential of the few sperm cells that reach the site of fertilization in vivo. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords:capacitation  chlortetracycline  FPP  adenosine  adenylate cyclase
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