Low-Na+Seawater Induces the Acrosome Reaction and Histone Degradation of Starfish Sperm in the Absence of Egg Jelly |
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Authors: | Tosikazu Amano Yoshihito Okita Motonori Hoshi |
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Affiliation: | Department of Life Science, Faculty of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Nagatsuda, Midori-ku, Yokohama 227, Japan |
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Abstract: | Egg jelly induces the degradation of histones as well as the acrosome reaction in the spermatozoa of Asterina pectinifera . Much similar degradation of histones without any apparent morphological changes such as the acrosome reaction was induced in the spermatozoa by merely dispersing them into Na+-free seawater. It required external Ca2+ much less than the jelly-induced one in normal seawater, and was not susceptible to Ca2+-channel antagonists, verapamil and diltiazem. Once spermatozoa were incubated with egg jelly in Ca2+-free seawater, they did not undergo the histone degradation even after subsequent addition of Ca2+, but Na+-free seawater rescued such blockage. Spontaneous acrosome reaction occurred in seawater containing 10–30 mM Na+ in a Ca2+-dependent manner. This reaction was accompanied by a rapid increase in intracellular pH (pHi) followed by a large pHi decrease. Diltiazem blocked a large decrease in pHi but scarcely inhibited the acrosome reaction induced by low-Na+ seawater. Increasing K+ inhibited both pHi changes and the acrosome reaction induced by low-Na+ seawater. Decreasing pH of seawater also inhibited the pHi changes but did not affect the acrosome reaction. Strontium was also effective to induce a rapid increase, followed by a gradual decrease, in pHi and the acrosome reaction. |
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