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Showing papers on "Sperm plasma membrane published in 1999"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Establishing the mechanisms for free radical generation by the male germ line and determining the factors that influence this activity are important objectives for future research in this area.
Abstract: A great deal of evidence has accumulated in recent years to suggest that there has been a gradual increase in male reproductive pathology over the past 30-40 years, as evidenced by increased rates of testicular cancer and declining semen quality. The hypothesis is advanced that this phenomenon is causally related to the ability of male germ cells to generate reactive oxygen metabolites. When produced in low levels, such metabolites are thought to enhance sperm function by stimulating DNA compaction and promoting a redox-regulated cAMP-mediated pathway that is central to the induction of sperm capacitation. When produced in excessive amounts, the same metabolites stimulate DNA fragmentation and a loss of sperm function associated with peroxidative damage to the sperm plasma membrane. Free radical-induced mutations in the male germ line may also be involved in the aetiology of childhood cancer and recent increases in the incidence of seminoma. In light of these considerations, establishing the mechanisms for free radical generation by the male germ line and determining the factors that influence this activity are important objectives for future research in this area.

423 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: β-cyclodextrins can completely replace BSA in media to support signal transduction leading to capacitation, further support the coupling of cholesterol efflux to theactivation of membrane and transmembrane signaling events leading to the activation of a unique signaling pathway involving the cross-talk between cAMP and tyrosine kinase second messenger systems.

332 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that cholesterol release is associated with the activation of a transmembrane signal transduction pathway involving PK-A and protein tyrosine phosphorylation, leading to functional maturation of the sperm.

310 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the acrosomal status of mammalian sperm from several species can be determined easily and reliably using this simple Coomassie Blue G‐250 staining method.
Abstract: The acrosome reaction is an exocytotic process that enables a sperm to penetrate the zona pellucida and fertilize an egg. The process involves the fenestration and vesiculation of the sperm plasma membrane and outer acrosomal membrane releasing the acrosomal contents. Many different methods have been developed to detect the acrosomal status of sperm. These techniques are sometimes complicated, costly, and can be used on only a few species. The aim of this study was to develop an efficient and inexpensive method to assess the acrosomal status of sperm from a variety of species. We prepared and fixed sperm from humans, cattle, swine, rabbits, guinea pigs, and mice and stained them with Coomassie G-250. The acrosomes were stained intensely blue in color. Following capacitation, some sperm were incubated for 1 hr with 10 μM calcium ionophore A23187 to induce the acrosome reaction. They were also stained with Coomassie G-250. Ionophore-treated sperm lacked Coomassie staining over the acrosomal region. Differential interference contrast (DIC), bright field microscopy or Pisum sativum agglutinin staining confirmed that the acrosomes of sperm from these species were reacted in response to calcium ionophore treatment and the acrosome reaction frequencies matched results with Coomassie staining. These results demonstrate that the acrosomal status of mammalian sperm from several species can be determined easily and reliably using this simple Coomassie Blue G-250 staining method. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 52:445–449, 1999. © 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

202 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
M.E. Hammadeh1, A S Askari1, Thomas Georg1, P. Rosenbaum1, Werner Schmidt1 
TL;DR: The freeze-thawing procedure significantly affects chromatin structure and sperm morphology, especially in the head and the tail regions, and this may explain the lower fertilization rate and IVF/ICSI outcome when frozen-thawed spermatozoa are used.
Abstract: Cryopreservation is known to impair sperm motility and decrease the fertilization rate by detrimental effects on acrosomal structure and acrosin activity. However, the consequences of cryopreservation on the integrity of the sperm nucleus, chromatin stability and centrosome are less clear. The present study was designed to determine the effect of the freeze-thawing procedure on chromatin condensation (aniline blue staining) and the morphology (strict criteria) and membrane integrity of human spermatozoa. The structural and functional characteristics of the sperm plasma membrane were measured by the eosin-test and hypo-osmotic swelling test which were done separately. Sperm cryopreservation was performed on semen samples from two groups of men classified as fertile (n = 20) and subfertile (n = 72), based on their reproductive history and semen analysis according to WHO guidelines. The mean percentage of condensed chromatin, morphologically normal spermatozoa and membrane integrity in all semen samples investigated (n = 92) decreased significantly (p = 0.0001) after freeze-thawing, in comparison to the value observed prior to freezing. By comparing the semen samples between fertile and subfertile patients, significantly (p = 0.0009) greater damage was demonstrated in the subfertile than in the fertile group. Furthermore, no significant difference was observed between the two groups with regard to the morphological alteration and structural as well as functional damage of the sperm membrane. In conclusion, the freeze-thawing procedure significantly affects chromatin structure and sperm morphology, especially in the head and the tail regions, and this may explain the lower fertilization rate and IVF/ICSI outcome when frozen-thawed spermatozoa are used. In addition, this study demonstrates that chromatin condensation is a sensitive parameter for the evaluation of cryodamage of semen samples from fertile and subfertile patients, though subfertile patients with very poor semen characteristics have yet to be studied. It is therefore recommended that chromatin condensation be used as an additional parameter for the assessment of sperm quality after freeze-thawing.

176 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A method based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer was used to ensure that incorporation of the fluorescent phospholipids into the sperm proceeded via monomeric transfer and enables, for the first time, assessment of changes in lipid asymmetry under fertilizing conditions.
Abstract: Reliable protocols were established for investigating asymmetric distributions of 6-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)amino-caproyl (C6NBD) phospholipids in the plasma membrane of boar sperm cells under physiological conditions. A method based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer was used to ensure that incorporation of the fluorescent phospholipids into the sperm proceeded via monomeric transfer. The total amount of incorporated phospholipid fluorescence and the proportion of translocated phospholipid fluorescence were determined by flow cytometric analysis before, and after, dithionite destruction of outer leaflet fluorescence. Catabolism of incorporated fluorescent phospholipids was blocked with phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. Membrane-damaged cells were detected with impermeant DNA stains, thereby enabling their exclusion from subsequent analyses of the flow cytometric data, whence it could be demonstrated that the labeled phospholipids were incorporated only via the outer plasma membrane leaflet in living sperm cells. Phospholipid uptake and internalization was followed at 38°C. After 1 hr of labeling, about 96% of the incorporated C6NBD-phosphatidylserine, 80% of C6NBD-phosphatidylethanolamine, 18% of C6NBD-phosphatidylcholine, and 4% of C6NBD-sphingomyelin were found to have moved across the plasma membrane bilayer to the interior of the spermatozoa. These inward movements of fluorescent phospholipids were ATP-dependent and could be blocked with sulfhydryl reagents. Movements from the inner to the outer leaflet of the sperm plasma membrane were minimal for intact fluorescent phospholipids, but were rapid and ATP-independent for fluorescent lipid metabolites. The described method enables, for the first time, assessment of changes in lipid asymmetry under fertilizing conditions. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 53:108–125, 1999. © 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

71 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results strongly suggest that the epididymal fluid ACE derives from the germinal form of ACE that is liberated from the testicular sperm in a specific epididcyal area.
Abstract: SDS-PAGE analysis of luminal fluid from the ram testis and epididymis revealed a protein of about 105 kDa in the fluid in the caput epididymal region. The molecular mass of this fluid protein shifted from 105 kDa to 94 kDa in the distal caput epididymidis and remained at 94 kDa in the lower regions of the epididymis. The possible sperm origin of this protein was suggested by the decrease in intensity of a 105-kDa compound on the sperm plasma membrane extract and by its total disappearance from the fluid of animals with impaired sperm production caused by scrotal heating. The 94-kDa protein was purified from ram cauda epididymal fluid, and a rabbit polyclonal antiserum was obtained. This antiserum showed that membranes of testicular sperm and sperm from the initial caput were positive for the presence of an immunologically related antigen. The protein was immunolocalized mainly on the flagellar intermediate piece, whereas in some corpus and caudal sperm, only the apical ridge of the acrosomal vesicle was labeled. The purified protein was microsequenced: its N-terminal was not found in the sequence database, but its tryptic fragments matched the sequence of the angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE). Indeed, the purified 94-kDa protein exhibited a carboxypeptidase activity inhibited by specific blockers of ACE. All the soluble seminal plasma ACE activity in the ram was attributable to the 94-kDa epididymal fluid ACE. The polyclonal antiserum also showed that a soluble form of ACE appeared specifically in the caput epididymal fluid of the boar, stallion, and bull. This soluble form was responsible for all the ACE activity observed in the fluid from the distal caput to the cauda epididymidis in these species. Our results strongly suggest that the epididymal fluid ACE derives from the germinal form of ACE that is liberated from the testicular sperm in a specific epididymal area.

59 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These studies suggest that a specific protein localized to the equine sperm head displays hyaluronidase activity, gets redistributed over the acrosomal region during capacitation, and may be important in fertility in this species.
Abstract: Sperm hyaluronidase has been implicated in sperm penetration of the extracellular matrix of the cumulus oophorus and may play a crucial role in gamete interaction and fertility in mammals. The objectives of this study were to characterize the enzyme activity of equine sperm hyaluronidase and to investigate its cellular distribution. Zymography of stallion sperm plasma membrane extracts was used to identify hyaluronidase activity in protein bands. Affinity-purified polyclonal IgG raised against equine sperm hyaluronidase was used to label fresh and capacitated stallion sperm, followed by indirect immunofluorescence. Equine sperm plasma membrane extracts displayed 3 major protein bands with potent hyaluronidase activity of approximately 54, 59, and 83 kDa. Under reducing conditions, a single protein band was observed at 62 kDa, although the reduced sample exhibited no enzyme activity. The polyclonal IgG labeled the postacrosomal region of stallion sperm and was redistributed over the acrosomal region during in vitro capacitation in a significant percentage of sperm cells. These studies suggest that a specific protein localized to the equine sperm head displays hyaluronidase activity, gets redistributed over the acrosomal region during capacitation, and may be important in fertility in this species.

55 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggest that a sperm protein with at least partial homology to the liver endomembrane P4-binding protein, is a putative P 4-receptor on the sperm plasma membrane involved in the P3-initiated AR of human sperm.

49 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Aug 1999-Zygote
TL;DR: It is witnessed that live human spermatozoa injected into moue oocytes often kept moving very actively within the ooplasm for more than 60 min, whereas motile mouse spermatozosa usually became immotile within 20 min after injection into the Ooplasm.
Abstract: To analyse the effect of the state of the sperm plasma membrane on oocyte activation rate following intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), three types of human and mouse spermatozoa (intact, immobilised and Triton X-100 treated) were individually injected into mouse oocytes. At 30, 60 and 120 min after injection, maternal chromosomes and sperm nuclei within oocytes were examined. Following human sperm injection, the fastest and the most efficient oocyte activation and sperm head decondensation occurred when the spermatozoa were treated with Triton X-100. Intact spermatozoa were the least effective in activating oocytes. Thus, the rate of mouse oocyte activation following human sperm injection is greatly influenced by the state of the sperm plasma membrane during injection. When mouse spermatozoa were injected into mouse oocytes, the rates of oocyte activation and sperm head decondensation within activated oocytes were the same irrespective of the type of sperm treatment prior to injection. We witnessed that live human spermatozoa injected into moue oocytes often kept moving very actively within the ooplasm for more than 60 min, whereas motile mouse spermatozoa usually became immotile within 20 min after injection into the ooplasm. In 0.002% Triton X-100 solution, mouse spermatozoa are immobilised faster than human spermatozoa. These facts seem to suggest that human sperm plasma membranes are physically and biochemically more stable than those of mouse spermatozoa. Perhaps the physical and chemical properties of the sperm plasma membrane vary from species to species. For those species whose spermatozoa have ‘stable’ plasma membranes, prior removal or ‘damage’ of sperm plasma membranes would increase the success rate of ICSI.

44 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study examined the effects of cooling and cryopreservation upon macropod spermatozoa (eastern grey kangaroo, Macropus giganteus and red-necked wallaby) and found the MEM/glycerol mixtures permitted better post-thaw sperm recovery than the other cryoprotectants.
Abstract: This study examined the effects of cooling and cryopreservation upon macropod spermatozoa (eastern grey kangaroo, Macropus giganteus and red-necked wallaby, Macropus rufogriseus). Sperm survival during and after freezing to -30 degrees C or -70 degrees C in minimum essential medium (MEM) + 5, 10, 20 or 30% (v/v) glycerol, MEM + 10 or 20% (v/v) ethylene glycol and MEM containing a mixture of 7.5% (v/v) glycerol + 10% (v/v) dimethylsulphoxide was examined by cryomicroscopy. The MEM/glycerol mixtures permitted better post-thaw sperm recovery than the other cryoprotectants. After freezing to -30 degrees C at 10 degrees C min(-1) in 20% glycerol, then rewarming at 20 degrees C min(-1), flagellar activity resumed in more than 50% of spermatozoa when the temperature increased into the range 5-10 degrees C. However, as the temperature increased into the range 20-25 degrees C, motility declined rapidly so that less than 5% motile cells were seen at 35 degrees C. Spermatozoa in MEM without cryoprotectant were also examined by cryomicroscopy to evaluate changes in flagellar configuration, swimming behaviour and viability during cooling from 35 degrees C to approximately -7 degrees C, and rewarming to 35 degrees C. Cooling from 35 to 28 degrees C induced kangaroo spermatozoa to exhibit rigid principal-piece bending and non-linear motility, which was reversed by further cooling and the spermatozoa resumed their normal linear movement. Rewarming induced principal-piece bending in the range of 20-30 degrees C, but this effect was reversed by further warming. Although red-necked wallaby spermatozoa showed these effects, they also exhibited a tendency to form rosette-like clusters during rewarming, especially when the temperature reached approximately 14 degrees C. The clusters were induced when the flagellar end-pieces became anteriorly reflected, producing hook-like flagellar conformations, which then became interlinked. © CSIRO 1999

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The lipid architecture in the sperm plasma membrane is demonstrated to be an extremely dynamic structure and may provide a physiological basis for new assays, able to discriminate between functional and non-physiological sperm cells.
Abstract: The capacitation process of sperm cells involves complex changes in the composition and orientation of molecules at the surface of the sperm cell. Here we focus on the lipid architecture in the sperm plasma membrane and demonstrate that the sperm plasma membrane is not static but is an extremely dynamic structure. Advanced fluoroscopic techniques enabled continuous monitoring of lipid organization in living cells and extremely rapid lipid movements were observed. The orientation of lipids in the sperm plasma membrane changed under capacitative treatments, was found to be sensitive for temperature and also changed upon binding of sperm cells to the zona pellucida. The changes in membrane properties coincided with an activation of protein kinases resulting in tyrosine phosphorylation of specific plasma membrane proteins. The detected membrane changes relate to intrinsic membrane properties such as fluidity, permeability, adhesiveness and fusibility. We think that these results may provide a physiological basis for new assays, able to discriminate between functional and non-physiological sperm cells.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The overall results indicate the presence of a low-abundance, plasma membrane-associated human sperm a-L-fucosidase, which is different in its properties from human seminal fluid a- L-favourable, and whose function is not yet known.
Abstract: Human semen contains a large amount of alpha-L-fucosidase activity, the great majority of which is found in the seminal fluid. Immunocytochemical studies indicate that a small amount of semen fucosidase activity is present on the sperm plasma membrane, primarily in the posterior head region. Subcellular fractionation studies also indicate that sperm alpha-L-fucosidase is present in the plasma membrane-enriched fraction. Comparative characterization of human seminal fluid and sperm alpha-L-fucosidases indicates that seminal fluid alpha-L-fucosidase has a broad pH optimum curve with a number of near-equal maxima between pH 4.8 and 7.0 while sperm fucosidase has a major optimum between pH 3.4 and 4.0. Isoelectric focusing indicates that seminal fluid alpha-L-fucosidase contains three to six isoforms with isoelectric points (pI) of 5-7 while sperm fucosidase contains two distinct isoforms with pI values of 5. 2 +/- 0.2 and 7.0 +/- 0.2. Western blotting indicates that seminal fluid fucosidase contains a major protein band with a molecular mass ratio (M(r)) of approximately 56 kDa while sperm fucosidase contains a major protein band of approximately 51 kDa. The overall results indicate the presence of a low-abundance, plasma membrane-associated human sperm alpha-L-fucosidase, which is different in its properties from human seminal fluid alpha-L-fucosidase(s), and whose function is not yet known.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is presented that GnRH antagonists inhibit sperm-zona pellucida binding in humans and it is suggested that this action of Gn RH antagonists may be due to an effect on zona receptors on the sperm plasma membrane.
Abstract: Previous work from our laboratory indicated that gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) increases human sperm-zona pellucida binding. Here we present evidence that GnRH antagonists inhibit sperm-zona pellucida binding in humans. Motile spermatozoa (10(7) cells/ml) were incubated in modified Tyrode's medium at 37 degrees C, in 5% CO(2) in air. After 4.5 h, aliquots of spermatozoa were treated with saline (control) or with different concentrations of GnRH antagonists (test). Each sperm aliquot was then tested in the hemizona binding assay. In this assay, the control aliquot was incubated with half a human zona pellucida (hemizona) and the test aliquot was incubated with the matching half. After 20 min, the hemizonae were withdrawn and the number of zona-bound spermatozoa counted using phase-contrast microscopy. In addition, the effect of GnRH antagonists upon the pattern of sperm movement, frequency of sperm-zona pellucida collisions, and percentage of living and acrosome-reacted spermatozoa was determined. The results indicated that treatment with GnRH antagonists decreased the number of zona-bound spermatozoa and did not change the pattern of sperm movement, frequency of sperm-zona collisions, and percentage of acrosome-reacted spermatozoa. We suggest that this action of GnRH antagonists may be due to an effect on zona receptors on the sperm plasma membrane.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that Drosophila melanogaster GlcNAc'ase and mannosidase are mannosylated integral membrane proteins that would function as exoenzymes with their active sites accessible in the extracellular space.
Abstract: Previous studies have identified beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase (GlcNAc'ase) and (alpha-mannosidase activities on the Drosophila melanogaster sperm surface which may have a role in fertilization. The aim of this study was to investigate their linkage to the sperm plasma membrane. We verified that glycosidases are not peripherally adsorbed to the cell surface by evaluating their resistance to release by KI, by buffered salt solutions of high ionic strength or alkaline buffers. Glycosidases were released from the sperm surface by detergents and, only to a minor extent, by mild proteolysis. Differential detergent solubilization pointed out that Triton X-114 was the most effective releasing agent for GlcNAc'ase and CHAPS for mannosidase. No activity was released from the membrane by a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). The released forms were quite hydrophilic in phase separation experiments with Triton X-114. This finding indicates the presence of a hydrophobic domain limited to a single transmembrane helix or/and the presence of an extensive glycosylation. The use of a Con-A binding assay demonstrated that both the enzymes are glycosylated. The molecular weight of the released glycosidases estimated by gel filtration was 158 kDa for GlcNAc'ase and 317 kDa for mannosidase. These results suggest that Drosophila melanogaster GlcNAc'ase and mannosidase are mannosylated integral membrane proteins that would function as exoenzymes with their active sites accessible in the extracellular space.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The fact that the L-type Ca(2+) channel blockers had no inhibitory effect on sperm surface galactosyltransferase or alpha-D-mannosidase, two carbohydrate-recognizing enzymes thought to be sperm surface receptors, suggests that the reagents block the AR by a mechanism other than binding to the active site of the enzymes.
Abstract: Mammalian spermatozoa undergo the acrosome reaction (AR) in response to the interaction of a carbohydrate-recognizing molecule(s) on the sperm plasma membrane (sperm surface receptor) and its complementary glycan (ligand) moiety(ies) on the zona pellucida (ZP). Previously, we demonstrated that a hexose (mannose) or two amino sugars (glucosaminyl or galactosaminyl residues) when covalently conjugated to a protein backbone (neoglycoproteins) mimicked the mouse ZP3 glycoprotein and induced the AR in capacitated mouse spermatozoa (Loeser and Tulsiani, Biol Reprod 1999; 60:94-101). To elucidate the mechanism underlying sperm-neoglycoprotein interaction and the induction of the AR, we have examined the effect of several AR blockers on neoglycoprotein-induced AR. Our data demonstrate that two known L-type Ca(2+) channel blockers prevented the induction of the AR by three neoglycoproteins (mannose-BSA, N-acetylglucosamine-BSA, and N-acetylgalactosamine-BSA). The fact that the L-type Ca(2+) channel blockers (verapamil, diltiazem) had no inhibitory effect on sperm surface galactosyltransferase or alpha-D-mannosidase, two carbohydrate-recognizing enzymes thought to be sperm surface receptors, suggests that the reagents block the AR by a mechanism other than binding to the active site of the enzymes.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Highly purified plasma membranes, isolated by an aqueous two-phase polymer method from goat epididymal spermatozoa, were found to possess a kinase activity that causes phosphorylation of serine and threonine residues of several endogenous plasma membrane proteins.
Abstract: Highly purified plasma membranes, isolated by an aqueous two-phase polymer method from goat epididymal spermatozoa, were found to possess a kinase activity that causes phosphorylation of serine and threonine residues of several endogenous plasma membrane proteins. Cyclic AMP, cyclic GMP, Ca2+\p=n-\calmodulin, phosphatidylserine\p=n-\diolein,polyamines and heparin had no appreciable effect on this kinase. Autoradiographic analysis showed that the profile of the phosphorylation of membrane proteins by this endogenous cAMP-independent protein kinase underwent marked modulation during the transit of spermatozoa through the epididymis. In caput sperm plasma membrane, 18, 21, 43, 52, 74 and 90 kDa proteins were phosphorylated, whereas, in the corpus and cauda epididymal spermatozoa, a differential phosphorylation pattern was observed with respect to the 90, 74, 21 and 18 kDa proteins. The rate of phosphorylation of the 74 kDa protein decreased markedly during the early phase of sperm maturation (caput to distal corpus epididymides) whereas there was little change in kinase activity in sperm plasma membrane. In contrast, the rates of phosphorylation of the 18 and 21 kDa proteins increased during the terminal phase (distal corpus to distal cauda epididymides) of sperm maturity, although the kinase activity of membrane decreased significantly during this phase. The modulation of the phosphorylated states of these specific membrane proteins may play an important role in the maturation of epididymal spermatozoa

Journal Article
TL;DR: Future contraceptive developments may arise from production of targeted inhibitors, research on the displacement of sperm proteins in the epididymis and interference with sperm plasma membrane ion channels.
Abstract: The induction of infertility in males of several species through epididymal interference is more difficult to achieve by reduction of the amounts of epididymal secretions (eg alpha-glucosidase, L-carnitine) or immunological interference with secreted proteins (eg D/E, P34H, P26h) than by direct actions of drugs on sperm function (eg inhibition of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase by chloro-compounds). The latter approach holds promise for mankind as human sperm are susceptible to glycolytic inhibition. Future contraceptive developments may arise from production of targeted inhibitors, research on the displacement of sperm proteins in the epididymis and interference with sperm plasma membrane ion channels.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study clearly shows that ICSI of membrane-damaged sperm does not affect pronuclear formation, although sperm head decondensation is much higher.
Abstract: This study investigated the ability of membrane-damaged sperm to undergo sperm head decondensation and male pronuclear formation following intracytoplasmic sperm injection. For induction of membrane-damage, sperm were exposed to 0.1% Triton X-100 for a few seconds. The single sperm curling (SSC) test was performed to evaluate the viability of the sperm. Of the injected oocytes 49 and 47% developed male pronuclei in the experimental and control groups, respectively. Sperm head decondensation was much higher in the membrane-damaged group (84 versus 70%). This study clearly shows that ICSI of membrane-damaged sperm does not affect pronuclear formation, although sperm head decondensation is much higher.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that the PPase M-I is an ecto-enzyme that may play an important role in sperm physiology by causing the dephosphorylation of the sperm outer surface phosphoproteins.
Abstract: A phosphoprotein phosphatase (PPase M-I) that dephosphorylates serine and threonine residues of histones was isolated from the goat cauda-epididymal sperm plasma membrane and partially characterized. The PPase was solubilized from the sperm membrane by treating it with 0.1 N NaOH at pH 11.4 and the solubilized enzyme was partially purified by concanavalin A-sepharose affinity chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), revealing it to be a 520-kDa protein. The PPase gave a single protein band in native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), but in the presence of SDS it resolved into multiple proteins (35–170 kDa) showing that the isolated enzyme contained a few contaminating proteins. The enzyme is a glycoprotein because it binds with high affinity to concanavalin A. It was maximally active at pH 8.0 and its activity was not dependent on bivalent metal ions. The enzyme is a specific phosphatase as it displayed higher affinity for dephosphorylation of large molecular weight phosphate esters. The PPase showed broad substrate specificity for the dephosphorylation of a variety of proteins. The membrane-associated PPase was strongly (70–80%) inhibited by detergents (0.5%) such as Nonidet P-40, Lubrol PX, Triton X-100 and Tween-20. Pyrophosphate (5 mM) and orthovanadate (400 M) had no significant effect on the activity of the isolated PPase whereas polyamines such as spermine (10 mM) nd spermidine (10 mM) slightly inhibited (20%) the enzymatic activity. Inorganic phosphate (10 mM) and NaF (10 mM), the well-known inhibitors of the cytosolic PPases, had no appreciable effect on the activity of PPase M-I, indicating that the membrane-bound PPase is distinct from the cytosolic PPases. The enzyme was radiolabelled when the intact spermatozoa were subjected to lactoperoxidase-mediated radioiodination reaction. The results show that the PPase M-I is an ecto-enzyme that may play an important role in sperm physiology by causing the dephosphorylation of the sperm outer surface phosphoproteins.

Journal Article
TL;DR: A significant correlation between loss of sperm function meditated by induction of peroxidative damage to sperm plasma membrane is indicated and the water test can be used as a preliminary screening test for sperm membrane integrity.
Abstract: New approaches need to be pursued towards the assessment of sperm quality using biochemical markers. In order to help develop a good biochemical marker to assess sperm-membrane integrity, the enzyme creatine kinase (CK) was studied in semen of normal, oligospermic and azoospermic samples and correlated with sperm concentration, lipid-peroxidation (LP) and water test. Presence of isoforms of creatine kinase (CK-MB) was also seen. An inverse correlation was observed between CK activity and sperm concentration (p<0.001). Water test was seen to be inversely correlated with CK activity (p<0. 001). Lipid peroxidation showed positive correlation with CK activity (p<0.001). A significant correlation between loss of sperm function meditated by induction of peroxidative damage to sperm plasma membrane is indicated. Enzymes like CK can serve as good biochemical marker along with lipid peroxidation to confirm loss of sperm membrane integrity. The water test can be used as a preliminary screening test for sperm membrane integrity.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The sperm plasma membrane protein PH-20 has previously been shown to be an effective immunogen for protection against fertilization in guinea pigs and several high-titer immune sera obtained from animals rendered infertile by gpPH-20 injections were used to screen a set of overlapping peptides that cover the entire 494-residue sequence.

01 Feb 1999
TL;DR: The value of conventional and modern sperm analysis systems considering the process of fertilization are described and the combination of selected semen tests gives a higher accuracy for the prediction of fertilizing capacity compared with a single test.
Abstract: The prediction of fertility is a primary goal in the field of reproductive medicine. The aim of the present paper is to describe the value of conventional and modern sperm analysis systems considering the process of fertilization. The classical assessment of motility and morphology enables the rough estimation of semen quality in order to select ejaculates for the use in artificial insemination. Recent methods for sperm diagnosis, such as fluorescent marking for the detection of sperm plasma membrane integrity, the hypoosmotic swelling test, and computer assisted semen analysis allow for the evaluation of a large number of spermatozoa and the assessment of sperm dynamics under in vitro-fertilization conditions. The oocyte penetration test investigates the ability of spermatozoa for capacitation, hyperactivation and acrosome reaction in vitro. The amount of specific seminal plasma proteins is related to fertility and thereby provides an additional semen evaluation method. For the use of a given semen test the specific in vitro condition has to be considered. In addition, the evaluated criteria relevant for the process of fertilization need to be defined. The combination of selected semen tests gives a higher accuracy for the prediction of fertilizing capacity compared with a single test.

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: The published and unpublished results on the sperm surface mannosidase, a hapten-binding enzyme thought to be involved in the initial sperm-egg interaction by binding to high mannose/hybrid-type glycans on ZP glycoconjugates, are consistent with the proposed receptor-like role.
Abstract: Mammalian fertilization is the net result of a complex set of molecular events which enable the capacitated spermatozoa to recognize and bind to the egg’s extracellular coat, the zona pellucida (ZP). Sperm-egg interaction leading to fertilization is a species-specific carbohydrate-mediated event which depends on glycan-recognizing proteins (glycosyltransferases/ glycosidases/lectin-like carbohydrate-binding molecules) on the sperm plasma membrane (receptors) and their complementary glycan units (ligands) on homologous ZP. In this report, I have summarized our published and unpublished results on the sperm surface mannosidase, a hapten-binding enzyme thought to be involved in the initial sperm-egg interaction by binding to high mannose/hybrid-type glycans on ZP glycoconjugates. Evidence thus far available includes: (1) an a-D-mannosidase is present on the sperm plasma membranes of several species, including man; (2) high mannose/hybrid-type glycans (potential ligand sites) are present on mouse ZP2 and ZP3; (3) sperm-specific mannosidase is synthesized in the spermatogenic cells in a high molecular weight precursor form which undergoes proteolysis by a trypsin-like protease during spermatogenesis in the testis and sperm maturation in the epididymis; (4) the maturation-associated increase in sperm plasma membrane (PM) mannosidase correlates with the zona-binding ability of spermatozoa and (5) sperm surface mannosidase appears to have a receptor-like role in the mouse and rat. Taken together, these results are consistent with the proposed receptor-like role for the sperm surface mannosidase in sperm-egg interaction.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A functional competence of the AM was supported by the correlation of theAM-expression on the spermatozoal surface after the acrosome reaction with three function tests: the zona-free hamster oocyte penetration test, the in vitro fertilization of human oocytes and the cell attachment assays.
Abstract: Ejaculated spermatozoa and spermatogenic cells express α- and β-chains of β1-, β3- and β4-integrins as well as their ligands laminin and fibronectin. These adhesion molecules (AM) showed an extended intra- and interindividual variation and different patterns of location. The mRNA transcripts of the AM were detectable by nested polymerase chain reaction in the spermatozoa. The conclusion of a functional competence of the AM was supported by the correlation of the AM-expression on the spermatozoal surface after the acrosome reaction with three function tests: (i) the zona-free hamster oocyte penetration (HOP) test, (ii) the in vitro fertilization of human oocytes and (iii) the cell attachment assays. AM labelling was modified by progesterone, human follicular fluid, disintegration of the sperm plasma membrane in seminal plasma, and micro organisms. In contrast, the sperm cryopreservation did barely influence the labelling of spermatozoal AM.