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Sperm plasma membrane

About: Sperm plasma membrane is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1016 publications have been published within this topic receiving 49964 citations.


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TL;DR: Antibody activity against the sperm plasma membrane was found in serum and uterine fluid samples from the sperm-extract immune rabbits, as indicated by an inhibition of sperm attachment to ova in vitro and by indirect immunofluorescent staining on unfixed sperm.
Abstract: Sperm and uterine fluid samples were collected from rabbits that had been isoimmunized systemically and were challenged locally against a sperm extract (soluble fraction of lithium diiodosalicylate extraction) and a sperm-pellet extract (soluble fraction of Nonidet NP-40 treatment of pellet remaining after LIS extraction). Antibody activity against the sperm plasma membrane was found in serum and uterine fluid samples from the sperm-extract immune rabbits, as indicated by an inhibition of sperm attachment to ova in vitro and by indirect immunofluorescent staining on unfixed sperm. A strong acrosome staining was noted with fixed sperm. These samples did not show fluorescent staining of swollen heads of sperm or react with blastocysts. The immune samples from rabbits injected with sperm-pellet extract displayed the opposite reactions. These samples did not react with the plasma membrane of sperm but the IgA antibodies of the uterine fluids caused immunofluorescent staining of the swollen heads of sperm and ...

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The non genomic effects of estradiol (17βE2) in human sperm and its effects on sperm stimulation by extracellular ATP, a potent activator of sperm acrosome reaction were evaluated.
Abstract: Steroid hormones, beside their classical genomic mechanism of action, exert rapid, non genomic effects in different cell types. These effects are mediated by still poorly characterized plasma membrane receptors that appear to be distinct from the classic intracellular receptors. In the present study we evaluated the non genomic effects of estradiol (17βE2) in human sperm and its effects on sperm stimulation by extracellular ATP, a potent activator of sperm acrosome reaction. In human sperm 17βE2 induced a rapid increase of intracellular calcium (Ca2+) concentrations dependent on an influx of Ca2+ from the extracellular medium. The monitoring of the plasma membrane potential variations induced by 17βE2 showed that this steroid induces a rapid plasma membrane hyperpolarization that was dependent on the presence of Ca2+ in the extracellular medium since it was absent in Ca2+ free-medium. When sperm were pre-incubated in the presence of the K+ channel inhibitor tetra-ethylammonium, the 17βE2 induced plasma membrane hyperpolarization was blunted suggesting the involvement of K+ channels in the hyperpolarizing effects of 17βE2. Extracellular ATP induced a rapid plasma membrane depolarization followed by acrosome reaction. Sperm pre-incubation with 17βE2 inhibited the effects of extracellular ATP on sperm plasma membrane potential variations and acrosome reaction. The effects of 17βE2 were specific since its inactive steroisomer 17αE2 was inactive. Furthermore the effects of 17βE2 were not inhibited by tamoxifen, an antagonist of the classic 17βE2 intracellular receptor.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Sperm quality parameters were mainly affected by high temperatures, and the addition of all-trans-retinol to the storage extender did not show any effect on sperm quality parameters, but the percentage of sperm cells with altered acrosome was significantly reduced when retinol was present in the extender under heat stress conditions.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new approach was developed for sperm concentration determination using a flow cytometer with simultaneous measurement of sperm membrane integrity after fluorescent staining with SYBR®−14 and propidium iodide in sperm from Zebrafish Danio rerio.
Abstract: Control of sperm concentration is required to ensure consistent and reproducible results for cryopreservation and in vitro fertilization protocols. Determination of sperm concentration is traditionally performed with a counting chamber (e.g., hemocytometer), or more recently with a spectrophotometer. For small-sized biomedical model fishes, the availability of sperm sample is limited to microliters, so it is desirable to develop fast and accurate approaches for concentration determination that also minimize sample use. In this study, a new approach was developed for sperm concentration determination using a flow cytometer (Accuri C6, BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA) with simultaneous measurement of sperm membrane integrity after fluorescent staining with SYBR(®) -14 and propidium iodide (PI) in sperm from Zebrafish Danio rerio. The goal was to develop a protocol for simultaneous determination of sperm quality and quantity by flow cytometry. The objectives were to (1) determine the effects of sample volume (250 and 500 µl) and analysis volume (10 and 50 µl) on the accuracy of particle counting using standard volumetric validation beads; (2) identify the effective range of sperm concentrations that flow cytometry can measure; (3) test the precision and reproducibility of the sperm concentration measurements; and (4) verify the flow cytometry approach by comparison with measurement with a hemocytometer and a microspectrophotometer. Sample volumes of 250 and 500 µl and analysis volumes of 10 and 50 µl did not affect bead count with the factory-set flow rates of "medium" or "fast," and the precision and accuracy was retained across a concentration range of 1 × 10(3) -1 × 10(7) cells/ml. The approach developed in this study was comparable to traditional methodologies such as hemocytometer or microspectrophotometer. This study provides an efficient, accurate, and rapid method for determination of sperm concentration using flow cytometry while providing simultaneous assessment of sperm membrane integrity. Such approaches can reduce the time needed for quantity assessment and maximize the use of valuable sperm samples. © 2015 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: CLC pretreatment significantly increased the percentage of live, intact, and live-intact spermatozoa (P) and the sperm plasma membrane integrity were estimated in both groups by a modified hypo-osmotic swelling test associated with supravital eosin staining.

15 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20221
202121
202029
201920
201827
201726