Gene/Protein
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0024591 (
malignant hyperthermia
)
2,353
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The distribution of the sperm protein
SP-10
was investigated in plastic-embedded samples of human testes by light and electron microscopy. An immunogold and silver enhancement technique, in conjunction with a monoclonal antibody (
MHS
-10) raised against
SP-10
, was used to localize the protein.
SP-10
was detected in spermatids at each of the six stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. Light microscopy showed immunoreactive material at the circumference of developing acrosomes in the early steps of spermiogenesis. As differentiation proceeded and cell shape changed from round to elongated, immunoreactive material appeared in an arc, which gradually became a V shape bordering the spermatid nucleus. The area of the immunoreactive material and its shape corresponded to that of the developing acrosome. At the electron microscopic level, gold particles indicative of the presence of
SP-10
were detected on electron-dense material found within the developing acrosomal vesicle in early steps of spermiogenesis. As the electron density of the acrosome increased, a high concentration of gold particles was seen in the vesicle matrix. The gold particles gradually became associated with the inner and outer acrosomal membranes of the most mature spermatids.
...
PMID:Localization of sperm antigen SP-10 during the six stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium in man. 186 40
The monoclonal antibody (mAb)
MHS
-10 (IgG1) is a mouse antihuman sperm antibody which recognizes a polymorphic sperm protein, (
SP-10
), which has previously been localized within the acrosomal matrix and the acrosomal membranes. The
SP-10
antigen has been shown to be sperm-specific and is not found in somatic tissues. It is stage specific, having been immunohistologically localized to Golgi phase spermatids and all subsequent phases of spermiogenesis. In the present study, acetone-dried smears from washed human semen containing significant numbers of round cells were probed with mAb
MHS
-10. Monoclonal antibody-labeled cells were visualized by a standard streptavidin-biotin immunoperoxidase method using a light microscope. The
MHS
-10 mAb immunoreacted with mature sperm and with a subset of round cells diagnosed as developing spermatids, which had been sloughed off from the testis at varying stages of acrosome formation. To rule out possible cross-reactivity of the mAb with leukocytes in semen, a leukocyte surface marker (anti-HLe-1) was used in conjunction with
MHS
-10. Round cell populations staining with
MHS
-10 did not stain with anti-HLe-1. The mAb
MHS
-10 is thus a promising probe for the identification and quantitation of immature germ cells in human semen.
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis of immature germ cells in semen utilizing monoclonal antibody MHS-10 to the intra-acrosomal antigen SP-10. 229 14
The human sperm protein
SP-10
was previously defined as a "primary vaccine candidate" by a World Health Organization Taskforce on Contraceptive Vaccines. By one- and two-dimensional immunoblots, we show that
SP-10
, extracted from ejaculated human sperm, demonstrated a polymorphism of immunogenic peptides from 18 to 34 kDa, a pattern that was conserved from individual to individual and was not altered by reducing agents. The majority of the antigenic peptides possessed isoelectric points of approximately 4.9. Immunocytochemistry on testis sections indicated that
SP-10
was localized to round spermatids and spermatozoa within the adluminal compartment of the seminiferous epithelium. Immunofluorescence showed that
SP-10
was not associated with the surface of acrosome-intact, ejaculated sperm. Light and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry localized
SP-10
throughout the acrosome, and electron microscopic evidence demonstrated a bilaminar array in association with the inner aspect of the outer acrosomal membrane and the outer aspect of the inner acrosomal membrane. After induction of the acrosome reaction with the ionophore A23187,
SP-10
remained displayed on the sperm head in association with the inner acrosomal membrane and equatorial segment. The results indicate that the
MHS
-10 monoclonal antibody may be used as a marker of acrosome development in the human and as a probe to evaluate acrosome status. The results also support the hypothesis that inhibition of sperm-egg interaction by anti-
SP-10
monoclonal antibody may occur as a result of antigen exposure following the acrosome reaction.
...
PMID:Biochemical and morphological characterization of the intra-acrosomal antigen SP-10 from human sperm. 231 Aug 16
The intra-acrosomal human sperm protein
SP-10
was previously designated a "primary vaccine candidate" by a World Health Organization Taskforce on Contraceptive Vaccines. In the present study, a monoclonal antibody to
SP-10
(
MHS
-10) was employed on Western blots to identify immunoreactive
SP-10
in sperm extracts from baboon (Papio cyanocephalus anubis) and two macaques (Macaca mulatta and Macaca fascicularis). In each of these primates, the
MHS
-10 monoclonal antibody recognized a polymorphic pattern of immunoreactive peptides similar to that in humans. Immunoreactive
SP-10
was also demonstrated in pig sperm. Using purified preparations of the previously described intra-acrosomal molecules acrosin and sperminogen in the pig, we observed that the
MHS
-10 monoclonal antibody did not react with these proteins, indicating
SP-10
is distinct from these known acrosomal components. Sperm from several common species including the rabbit, bull, rat, guinea pig and cat did not immunoreact with the
MHS
-10 monoclonal antibody. By use of a radioactive probe spanning 628 nucleotides of the open reading frame for
SP-10
on Northern blots of poly A + RNA obtained from testes of Macaca fascicularis, Papio papio, and Papio cyanocephalus anubis, a 1.35-kb mRNA of identical size to the mRNA from human testes was identified. These results indicate that baboons, macaques, and pigs may be appropriate models for testing an
SP-10
-based contraceptive vaccine.
...
PMID:Identification of human acrosomal antigen SP-10 in primates and pigs. 233 31
The testis-specific human sperm antigen,
SP-10
, has been designated a 'primary vaccine candidate' by the World Health Organization Taskforce on Contraceptive Vaccines. Molecular cloning and sequencing of the cDNAs coding for human (h) and baboon (b)
SP-10
have been reported. To produce large amounts of pure antigen for ongoing studies of the immunogenicity and anti-fertility effects of
SP-10
, we used an efficient Escherichia coli expression system. The full-length open reading frames for hSP-10 and bSP-10 were placed under the inducible T7 bacteriophage RNA polymerase/promoter system. An in-frame fusion was made such that a His6 stretch was produced at the C terminus of
SP-10
. Upon induction of gene expression, large amounts of hSP-10 or bSP-10 were synthesized and the recombinant (re-) protein segregated into an insoluble fraction. The protein was then solubilized in 6 M guanidine.HCl and purified by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). The yield of purified bSP-10 preparation was approx. 20 micrograms/ml of culture. Immunoreactivity of the purified re-
SP-10
with
MHS
-10, a monoclonal antibody specific to
SP-10
, and rabbit polyclonal sera raised against
SP-10
, indicated that the synthesized antigen was suitable for immunization studies. Four female baboons were then immunized with the re-bSP-10 antigen. Immunoblots using pre-immune and immune sera from these animals indicated that all four baboons produced antibodies that reacted with native
SP-10
extracted from human sperm in a manner identical to that of
MHS
-10, the positive control. Immune sera also stained the acrosome region of human and baboon sperm heads by immunofluorescence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Production in Escherichia coli, purification and immunogenicity of acrosomal protein SP-10, a candidate contraceptive vaccine. 792 98