Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A specific 135-kDa protein was purified from porcine cauda epididymal fluid. Analysis of its N-terminal amino acid sequence revealed it to be a new protein. Stable clones of hybridomas that produced monoclonal antibodies against the purified 135-kDa protein were established. A clone, B-11, reacting both with epididymal fluid and with sperm plasma membranes was selected and used in this study. Immunoblotting analysis showed that B-11 reacted only with a 135-kDa protein among epididymal fluid proteins. In contrast, B-11 did not recognize a similar 135-kDa sperm protein but did strongly react with a 27-kDa protein among sperm membrane proteins, extracted by NP-40 in the presence of protease inhibitors. B-11 also reacted only with a 27-kDa protein fragment among trypsin digests of the 135-kDa epididymal protein. The 135-kDa protein was first detected, by ELISA or immunoblotting analysis, at the beginning of the corpus epididymis. Maximal levels were reached in the distal corpus and levels were slightly decreased in the cauda epididymis. On the other hand, the surface of caput sperm were found to contain small amounts of antigen(s), the concentration of which gradually increased during epididymal transit. In immunocytochemical studies, the antigen was detectable in the epithelial cells from the initial segment to the corpus of the epididymis but not in the caudal cells. In the lumen, the presence of the 135 kDa protein was apparent in the corpus (at a maximum in the middle and distal corpus) and to a lesser degree in the caudal lumen. The 27-kDa protein was distributed all over the equatorial region of the acrosome of less than 10% of caput epididymal sperm. As sperm passed through the corpus epididymis, the percentage of immunoreactive cells increased and the protein was restricted to specific domains of the sperm head. Thus, on the mature sperm, antigen was localized in a crescent-shaped area of the equatorial segment just behind the anterior part of the acrosome and on the apical rim of the sperm head. This is the first observation of a sperm surface antigen derived from an epididymal protein as a proteolytic fragment that interacts with specific regions of the sperm membrane during the process of spermatozoa maturation.
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PMID:Localization of a maturation-dependent epididymal sperm surface antigen recognized by a monoclonal antibody raised against a 135-kilodalton protein in porcine epididymal fluid. 149 68

Several studies suggest that acrosin, an acrosomal trypsin-like serine proteinase, plays a role in fertilization. The enzyme is present in an enzymatically inactive precursor form, called proacrosin and is believed to be converted to the enzymatically active form(s) through one/multiple physiological event(s) prior to the sperm penetration of the zona pellucida. Although, the proacrosin-acrosin system of several species has been well documented, the study of the enzyme system in bovine caput and cauda epididymis (where the maturation of spermatozoa occurs) has not been characterized. The present study demonstrates the quantification and partial characterization of the proacrosin-acrosin proteinase system in unpurified acrosomal extracts of bovine caput and cauda epididymal sperm. Proacrosin activation followed the sigmoidal type of activation curve. Activation experiments demonstrate that almost 80-90% of this protein exists in zymogen (proacrosin) form either in ejaculated or caput and cauda epididymal spermatozoa. Time-course activation studies showed that the zymogen in isolated spermatozoa was completely converted to active non-zymogen form in 3 and 5 h after removal from the cauda and caput regions, respectively, at pH 8.0 at 25 degrees C. This conversion was markedly inhibited by calcium in a dose dependent manner and the inhibition was reversible. On the other hand, calcium has a stimulatory effect on the hydrolytic activity of acrosin. These studies reveal that the proacrosin-acrosin system can be identified in crude extracts of bull epididymal and ejaculated sperm.
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PMID:Bovine epididymal sperm proacrosin-acrosin system: quantification and partial characterization. 150 54

Crude preparations of collagenase, which have been used commonly for tissue dissociation, contain proteases that dissolve zonae pellucidae of hamster and mouse oocytes without reducing the ability of the oolemma to fuse with spermatozoa. This gentle proteolytic removal of zona is particularly useful for the study of sperm-oocyte fusion in mice, as trypsin, chymotrypsin and pronase damage the mouse oolemma.
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PMID:Collagenase as an agent for dissolving the zona pellucida of hamster and mouse oocytes. 166 55

In order to increase the value of the zona-free hamster oocyte penetration test, a comparatively simple and fast method using the fluorochrome Hoechst 33342 was developed. Human spermatozoa were washed and incubated 1 hr medium BWW for capacitation. Hamster oocytes were stripped of cumulus oophorus and zona pellucida with hyaluronidase and trypsin, washed and used immediately. Thirty oocytes were placed in a drop of BWW containing 3,5.10(6)/ml of human spermatozoa under mineral oil. The sperm-oocyte preparation was incubated for 3 hr at 37 degrees C, during the last 15 min of incubation, the fluorochrome Hoechst 33342 (H) was added and incubation was allowed to proceed until the incubation time was over. Observations showed that the female pronucleus, eccentrically placed, gives a bright green-bluish fluorescence whereas chromatin of sperm heads shows different stages of decondensation and also a bright fluorescence. This inexpensive method has given consistent results in a large number of cases and provides an additional new approach to the "penetration test" as a proof of the capacity to form a "male pronucleus".
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PMID:The zona-free hamster oocyte penetration test: a simple procedure using a DNA fluorescent stain to detect the male pronucleus formation. 172 51

A new acrosin inhibitor with a relative molecular mass of about 8000 was isolated to apparent homogeneity from ejaculated boar spermatozoa. The inhibitor is effective against boar acrosin and bovine trypsin. It interacts with polyvalent antibodies against the acrosin inhibitor from boar seminal plasma, but differs from all known acrosin inhibitors in its amino acid composition and N-terminal sequence.
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PMID:Variability of acrosin inhibitors in boar reproductive tract. 180 45

Ejaculated spermatozoa from brush-tailed possums and tammar wallabies were washed by a 'swim up' procedure into Hanks Balanced Salt Solution (HBSS), and then exposed to test solutions. Spermatozoa were incubated at 33 degrees C, or room temperature when long-term sperm survival (greater than 10 h) was required. Exposure of spermatozoa to calcium ionophore A23187, cyclic nucleotides, phosphoinositide pathway intermediates, lysophospholipids, trypsin or 'capacitating' high ionic-strength medium (380 mosmol) followed by 3% bovine serum albumin for periods up to 24 h did not induce acrosomal loss. However, there were major changes within the acrosome: large numbers of empty membrane-bound vesicles were formed, the electron density of the acrosomal matrix decreased and the acrosome swelled slightly. The origin of the vesicles is unclear but the acrosomal membranes and the plasma membrane remained intact.
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PMID:Stability of the acrosome of the brush-tailed possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) and tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) in vitro and after exposure to conditions and agents known to cause capacitation or acrosome reaction of eutherian spermatozoa. 184 24

Cauda epididymal guinea pig spermatozoa are arranged in rouleaux, with the sperm heads stacked one on top of the other; the plasma membranes over the apical segment of the acrosomes of adjacent sperm are linked and form non-fusigenic "junctional" zones. A complex structural and temporal sequence of membrane fusions occurs during the acrosome reaction of guinea pig sperm in rouleaux. In this study, we have devised a procedure for dispersing the rouleaux and isolating a population of single, motile guinea pig sperm, and have investigated the ultrastructural features of the acrosome reaction in single sperm to determine if the pattern of membrane fusions is different from sperm in rouleaux. The rouleaux were dispersed using trypsin, and damaged cells were removed by passing the sperm suspension through a glass bead column; a population of 70-90% motile, acrosome-intact, single sperm was obtained. Sperm were then induced to undergo lysolecithin-mediated, "synchronous" acrosome reactions, and processed for transmission electron microscopy. The acrosome reaction involved a complex sequence of membrane fusions between the plasma membrane (PM) and outer acrosomal membrane (OAM). On the convex surface of the apical segment, sheets of hybrid membrane and parallel arrays of hybrid membrane tubules formed; filaments were associated with the luminal surface of the residual OAM in these regions. Hybrid membrane vesicles were produced on the concave surface of the apical segment, but fusion was delayed relative to the convex surface. In the principal segment, branching arrays of hybrid membrane tubules formed and later vesiculated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Ultrastructural analysis of the acrosome reaction in a population of single guinea pig sperm. 201 5

A previous study has characterized the major 47 kDa anti-sticking factor (ASF-I) from goat cauda-epididymal plasma (Roy, N., and Majumder, G.C., Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 991:114-122, 1989). This study reports the purification and characterization of ASF-II, another anti-sticking factor from the goat epididymal plasma. ASF-II was purified to apparent homogeneity by using concanavalin A-agarose affinity chromatography, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, alumina gel adsorption, and isoelectric focussing techniques. It showed a single protein band by both non-denaturing and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. ASF-II showed a molecular weight of 36,000 and a sedimentation constant of 2.4S. ASF-II is largely stable to heat treatment and it is a specific glycoprotein having high affinity and specificity for its anti-sticking action. At saturating concentration (1 nM) it inhibited adhesion of nearly 50% of spermatozoa to the glass surface of the haemocytometer counting chamber. Both the protein and sugar parts of the factor are essential for the anti-sticking activity since it lost its activity completely when treated with trypsin, L-fucosidase, or mannosidase. ASF-II does not coat the glass surface and it binds to spermatozoa. Data are consistent with the view that ASF-II has not been derived from the larger ASF-I molecule due to its enzymic modifications. Both ASF-I and -II had no effect on sperm forward motility as evidenced by spectrophotometric motility assays, indicating thereby the suitability of the factors to improve the existing sperm motility assays by eliminating the possibility of cell-sticking artifacts.
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PMID:Characterization of anti-sticking factor-II from goat epididymal plasma. 209 69

Low-molecular-mass zymogen was extracted from boar spermatozoa together with proacrosin using 10% acetic acid supplemented with 10% glycerol, and was purified by the sequential use of gel filtration on Sephadex G-75 and (FPLC) reversed-phase chromatography. LMM zymogen represented approximately 5% of the latent trypsin-like activity present in the sperm extract. SDS-PAGE indicated a molecular mass of 33 kDa. The zymogen reacted with both mouse monoclonal and rabbit polyclonal antibodies to boar acrosin. Determination of the N-terminal sequence of 34 amino-acid residues revealed its identity with the known N-terminal sequence of boar proacrosin.
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PMID:Is sperminogen a modified proacrosin? Isolation, purification, and partial characterization of low-molecular-mass boar proacrosin. 211 Nov 46

Several lines of evidence have demonstrated conclusively the presence of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (ecto-RC) activity on the external surface of goat cauda-epididymal intact spermatozoa. The intact-cell ecto-kinase that caused transfer of the terminal phosphate of exogenous ATP to the serine and threonine residues of exogenous histone was specifically activated by cAMP. As well, the ecto-kinase caused phosphorylation of the synthetic peptide Kemptide. The isolated spermatozoa, before or after incubation with reaction mixture for ecto-kinase assays, were approximately 99.5% viable, as shown by the analyses of ethidium bromide fluorescence and the cytosolic marker enzymes lactic dehydrogenase and 3-phosphoglycerate kinase. The ecto-kinase activity was not due to contamination of epididymal plasma and damaged cells or to protein kinase that may have leaked from the cells. There was little uptake of ATP and histone by the cells. The intact-cell kinase activity was strongly (80-90%) inhibited by treatment with membrane nonpenetrating surface probes: p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid (2 microM), diazonium salt of sulfanilic acid (DSS, 0.5 mM), and proteases such as trypsin, chymotrypsin, and pronase (each 125 micrograms/mL). Disruption of sperm plasma membrane by sonication or Triton X-100 (0.2%) caused about a fivefold increase of the intact sperm kinase activity. Highly purified sperm plasma membrane (PM) possessed ecto-kinase activity that was resolved into type I and II kinases by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, the type I isoenzyme being the major (approximately 70%) enzymic species. Treatment of the intact spermatozoa with DSS prior to isolation of PM caused a marked loss of the activities of both the isoenzymes, indicating thereby the "ecto" nature of the PM-bound type I and II kinases. Preparations of vigorously forward-motile spermatozoa with 100% intactness had approximately fourfold higher specific activity of the ecto-kinase than the "composite" cells from which the former cells were isolated. However, the profiles of the type I and II ecto-kinases of the composite, as well as forward-motile spermatozoa, were nearly identical. The data are consistent with the view that ecto-kinases may have role in the regulation of flagellar motility.
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PMID:Type I and II cAMP-dependent ecto-protein kinases in goat epididymal spermatozoa and their enriched activities in forward-motile spermatozoa. 216 Aug 33


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