Diacylglycerol and phosphatidate production and the exocytosis of the sperm acrosome
- PMID: 2171525
- DOI: 10.1016/s0006-291x(05)80165-2
Diacylglycerol and phosphatidate production and the exocytosis of the sperm acrosome
Abstract
We have investigated the production of diacylglycerol (DAG) and phosphatidate (PtdOH) during the exocytosis of the sperm acrosome. Ram spermatozoa treated with Ca2+ and the ionophore A23187 experienced a rapid breakdown of the polyphosphoinositides (PPIs), and a rise in [32P]Pi-labelled PtdOH and DAG mass; PtdOH mass, however, was unaffected. Treatment with Ca2+/A23187 and the DAG kinase inhibitor R59022 resulted in a dose-dependent increase in DAG mass and a concomitant decrease in [32P]PtdOH; such treatment showed a dose-dependent stimulation of acrosomal exocytosis. Pre-incubation with exogenous PtdOHs before stimulation with Ca2+/A23187 did not affect the time-course of exocytosis, whereas treatment with Ca2+/A23187 and exogenous DAGs (dioctanoylglycerol, oleoyl-acetyl-glycerol, or dioleoylglycerol) resulted in a dose-dependent stimulation of acrosomal exocytosis. Our results suggest that DAG, rather than PtdOH, is the important metabolite generated upon PPI hydrolysis; however, since spermatozoa lack protein kinase C, the target of DAG in most cells, a role for DAG in acrosomal exocytosis is as yet unclear.
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