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. 1987 Oct;18(2):163-78.
doi: 10.1002/mrd.1120180207.

Changes in binding of a 27-kilodalton chimpanzee cauda epididymal protein glycoprotein component to chimpanzee sperm

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Changes in binding of a 27-kilodalton chimpanzee cauda epididymal protein glycoprotein component to chimpanzee sperm

L G Young et al. Gamete Res. 1987 Oct.

Abstract

Motility patterns of caput epididymal chimpanzee sperm, caput epididymal chimpanzee sperm incubated in vitro with chimpanzee cauda epididymal fluid, and cauda epididymal chimpanzee sperm were assessed quantitatively. Sperm recovered from the caput epididymis showed no motility, whereas sperm recovered from cauda epididymis showed progressive forward motility. After incubation in cauda fluid, approximately 25% of caput epididymal sperm showed some motile activity. Electrophoretic analysis of 125I-labeled sperm plasma membrane preparations revealed that the surface of caput epididymal sperm, incubated in cauda fluid, was modified by the appearance of a major protein-glycoprotein surface component with an apparent molecular weight of 27 kilodaltons (kD). THis 27-kD component was not detected on caput epididymal sperm incubated in buffer or in caput fluid. However, it was present in cauda fluid and on cauda epididymal sperm. Binding to caput epididymal sperm was cell specific in that chimpanzee erythrocytes incubated in cauda fluid did not bind this 27-kD cauda fluid component. Motility patterns of ejaculated chimpanzee sperm and of ejaculated chimpanzee sperm incubated in the uterus of adult female chimpanzees also were assessed quantitatively. Ejaculated sperm showed progressive forward motility, whereas in utero incubated ejaculated sperm showed hyperactivated motility typical of capacitated sperm. Electrophoretic analysis of 125I-labeled sperm plasma membrane preparations revealed the loss of a 27-kD component from the surface of ejaculated sperm after in utero incubation. No significant change in the 125I-distribution pattern was detectable when ejaculated sperm were incubated in buffer. These results suggest that the lumenal fluid component, which becomes adsorbed to the surface of chimpanzee sperm during maturation in the epididymis and which is removed from the surface of mature chimpanzee sperm in the female reproductive tract, affects sperm motility.

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