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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We present results of a study devoted to genetic determination and to the mechanism of primary sex differentiation in mammals. Progress is achieved in the mapping of a Y chromosome region necessary and sufficient for testis determination in man (TDF) and mouse (Tdy). We discuss a possible role in sex regulation of a recently described highly conservative locus from this region, ZFY (and similar loci within other chromosomes probably coding for Zn-binding proteins, transcription regulators) and H-Y antigen as well. We note that neither locus ZFY nor H-Y can play the role of TDF (Tdy) and that studies in this direction should be carried out. Numerous works on fractioning according to sex of spermatozoa of mammals including man are critically reviewed. Contradictory data exist in literature concerning the applicability of different approaches for this purpose: from fractioning based on different inherent mobility of different sex cells or gel-filtration, to the sorting in a flow cytometer equipped with a laser light source and a computer. However, in many cases the principle underlying this or that method of fractionation and determining the positive results, i.e. the statistically important shift of the sex ratio as compared with the initial sperm, remains unclear. It is stated that on the immunological and electrophoretic approaches might appear most promising for practical application, and in cattle-breeding as well. Modern procedures for sex testing and the fertility control of spermatozoa are also examined.
Mol Biol (Mosk)
PMID:[Molecular mechanisms of regulating mammalian sex and problems of fractionating spermatozoa]. 189 35

beta 1, 4-Galactosyltransferase (GalTase) is localized to the plasma membrane of mouse sperm, in which it mediates the binding of sperm to glycoconjugate residues in the egg zona pellucida. In this study, the presence of subcellular distribution of sperm GalTase were determined in two other mammalian species that yield sufficient sperm for subcellular fractionation. Equine and bovine semen were collected, and the plasma membranes (PM), outer acrosomal membranes (OAM), and inner acrosomal membranes (IAM) were sequentially removed. The purities of the isolated membrane preparations were determined by transmission electron microscopy and found to be greater than or equal to 90%, 96%, and 98% for equine PM, OAM, and IAM, respectively, and greater than or equal to 80%, 94%, and 97% for bovine PM, OAM, and IAM, respectively. GalTase activity was assayed under optimal conditions in all membrane preparations and was preferentially localized to the isolated PM both in equine and in bovine spermatozoa. The selective localization of GalTase to the sperm PM in two other species suggest that it may serve as a generalized gamete receptor during initial sperm-egg binding in mammals.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jan
PMID:Galactosyltransferase activity is restricted to the plasma membranes of equine and bovine sperm. 189 95

Carp semen obtained from isolated fish after hormonal stimulation was highly variable in terms of volume of semen, osmotic pressure of the seminal plasma, and sperm capacity to move. Moreover, this last parameter was unstable when the spermatozoa were kept within the seminal plasma, and the present work was designed to investigate and possibly correct this phenomenon. Sperm potential movement was the major parameter studied and was measured by the percentage of motile cells in a final 3.000-fold dilution in a medium of low osmotic pressure in which sperm movement is known to occur (Morisawa and Suzuki, Science 210:1145-1147, 1980). This was completed with occasional measurements of flagellar beat frequencies and demembranation-reactivation of axonemal movement. The results showed that sperm potential movement was preserved upon dilution of the semen into cold 200 mM KCl medium and that semen of initially "poor" quality or spermatozoa that had lost their capacity to move during storage in the semen recovered gradually their potential movement during incubation at 2 degrees C in the same medium. The K+ dependence for both the conservation and the regeneration of sperm capacity to move showed a minimal requirement of 50 mM KCl in media of high osmotic pressure. Na+ ions had similar properties but not divalent cations. The K+ activation was not pH dependent between pH 9.03 and 6.04. Whatever the functional state of live spermatozoa, demembranation-reactivation occurred in ATP-Mg2+. It is concluded that, with dilution of the semen in appropriate conditions, carp spermatozoa retain or acquire potential movement and therefore are a lower vertebrate spermatozoa model available year-round. In addition, obtaining potentially nonmotile sperm and reversion in vitro might be useful to study the control of in vitro maturation.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jul
PMID:In vitro maturation of the potential for movement of carp spermatozoa. 193 Oct 42

The fluorescent labeling agent monobromobimane (mBBr) was used to label thiols and disulfides (after reduction of sperm disulfides by dithiothreitol) in intact spermatozoa. Bimane-labeled sperm of several mammalian species were analyzed by flow cytometry (FCM) and examined by fluorescent microscopy. FCM analysis showed sperm thiol oxidation to disulfides during epididymal maturation. FCM of labeled mature spermatozoa showed differences among species in the sperm thiol content. Heterogeneity in thiol content of sperm within individual samples was also observed. In addition, FCM patterns showed heterogeneity among and within samples in the content of disulfides and their resistance to reduction. FCM analysis reflected the microscopic appearance of the labeled spermatozoa. FCM analysis of bimane-labeled spermatozoa offers a convenient method for the study of sperm thiol-disulfide status and permits detection of sperm subpopulations within an individual sample. FCM analysis of mBBr-labeled spermatozoa may serve as a test to evaluate sperm quality.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jul
PMID:Sperm analysis by flow cytometry using the fluorescent thiol labeling agent monobromobimane. 193 Oct 44

The passage of spermatozoa along the epididymis is characterized by a gradual stabilization of intracellular organelles mainly through the oxidation of thiol groups. In this study, we examined the relationship between the thiol-disulfide status of human spermatozoa (using a specific fluorescent probe, monobromobimane) and routine semen analysis parameters. Fluorescence intensity was measured by spectrofluorimeter and its frequency distribution within samples, using a fluorescence-activated cell sorter. The mean proportion of reactive thiols SH/(SS + SH) in 29 semen samples was 29.8% +/- 2.5%. When comparing thiol labeling patterns, oligozoospermic samples differed from normozoospermic ones (P less than 0.05). However, within the normozoospermic group, no correlation was found between thiol-labeling patterns and routine sperm parameters or fertilizing capacity in vitro. No difference in thiol labeling patterns was found between "swim-up" and "whole semen" preparations.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jul
PMID:Thiol status in human sperm. 193 Oct 45

Monoclonal antibody MN13 raised against mouse spermatozoa specifically recognizes the postacrosomal region of the sperm head in several mammalian species. Colloidal gold-immunoelectron microscopy of demembranated mouse spermatozoa indicated that the antigen is associated with the outer layer of the periodic substructure apparently linking the postacrosomal sheath to the overlying plasma membrane. The antigen recognized by MN13 may contribute to the intimate association of the postacrosomal sheath with the overlying plasma membrane.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jul
PMID:A monoclonal antibody, MN13, that recognizes specifically a novel substance between the postacrosomal sheath and the overlying plasma membrane in the mammalian sperm head. 193 Oct 46

A group of antigens of 24-kD Mr from rat testes were characterised biochemically. These antigens were part of a larger molecule of approximately 200 kD. On treatment with disulfide bond reducing agent, the 200-kD molecule was reduced to subunits. Immunoreactivity was confined to a doublet of approximately 24 kD and a single band of approximately 50 kD Mr after the reduction. Glycoprotein in nature, this antigen shared immunoreactive epitopes with a 40-kD antigen on human spermatozoa. Antiserum raised in rabbits against the 24-kD antigen from rat testes reacted with antigens on the acrosome of human spermatozoa. Agglutination of sperm could be induced by the antiserum. The carbohydrate residue could be removed by mannosidase digestion. Chemical deglycosylation studies showed a slight decrease in molecular weight. Immunoreactivity was however not completely lost after chemical deglycosylation. Isoelectric focusing of the antigen identified nine isoelectric species. Two relatively minor species showed immunoreactivity. Acrosome-reacted spermatozoa showed loss of antigens from acrosome.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jul
PMID:Characterisation of 24-kD proteins from rat testes using polyclonal sera reactive to human sperm antigens. 193 Oct 48

Human spermatozoa were studied with a nonradioactive in situ hybridization method. Using a chemically modified DNA probe and immunocytochemical reactions for visualization, it was possible to obtain hybridization signals in 31 of 32 semen samples. Positive hybridization reactions, depending on cell accessibility, varied from 40% to over 90% for the different samples. Using a chromosome 1-specific DNA probe, disomy for this chromosome was found in 0.67% of all accessible sperm cells.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jan
PMID:Nonisotopic in situ hybridization as a method for nondisjunction studies in human spermatozoa. 199 76

Acrosome-reacted CB6F1 mouse spermatozoa with slight flagellar motility were microinjected under the zona pellucida of CB6F1 mouse oocytes. Electron microscopy revealed the presence of swollen and decondensed sperm heads in the oocyte cytoplasm. Sixty-one percent of the microinjected oocytes reached a morphologically apparent two-cell stage, but chromosomal analysis demonstrated only haploid chromosomal complements in all cases. The exposure of microinjected oocytes to suspensions of spermatozoa of mice homozygous for a 2,4 reciprocal translocation resulted in normal fertilization and embryonic development with a maternally as well as a paternally derived haploid genome. Identical results were obtained with oocytes microinjected with medium and subjected to in vitro fertilization thereafter. Thus it can be suggested that the microinjected spermatozoa with insufficient flagellar motility are incorporated into the oocyte cytoplasm by phagocytosis. These spermatozoa do not induce a polyspermy block but induce the oocyte to parthenogenetic development.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jan
PMID:Subzonal microinjection of mouse spermatozoa: insufficient sperm motility might induce phagocytosis. 199 79

Binding of neurotrophic ligands to rabbit spermatozoa was studied. Nicotinic cholinergic antagonists, [3H]alpha-bungarotoxin and [3H]dihydro-beta-erythroidine (DE), bound with high affinity to different sites in the tails of rabbit spermatozoa with the former binding to 10,207 sites/cell and the latter to 562 sites/cell. alpha-Bungarotoxin and DE sites resemble nicotinic sites in brain in binding affinity and specificity. [3H]Quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB), a muscarinic cholinergic antagonist, also bound with high affinity to a single class of sites located in the heads and tails of rabbit spermatozoa. The binding characteristics of the sperm muscarinic site are similar to muscarinic sites in both innervated and noninnervated cells. Rabbit spermatozoa incubated for 16-18 h in a medium which supported motility for an extended period possessed fewer binding sites than nonincubated spermatozoa for [3H] alpha-bungarotoxin and [3H]QNB and the KD for the latter ligand was also lower. Ligands specific for the kappa and delta opiate receptors showed no affinity for rabbit spermatozoa.
Mol Reprod Dev 1991 Jan
PMID:The binding characteristics of cholinergic sites in rabbit spermatozoa. 199 80


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