Abstract

To investigate the role of C in the pathogenesis of antisperm antibody (ASA)-mediated infertility, we evaluated the binding and biologic effects of antisperm IgG and autologous C on human sperm. A flow cytometric assay using motile sperm as a target for IgG ASA+ (n = 30) and ASA- (n = 5) sera was developed for the concomitant detection of sperm-bound IgG and the initial (C3d) and terminal (C5b-9) C components on the surface of human sperm. Of the 30 IgG ASA+ sera evaluated by flow cytometry, 15 (50%) and 22 (73.3%) sera were also positive for sperm-bound C3d and C5b-9, respectively. Monomeric IgG purified from C-fixing ASA+ serum was able to bind to sperm and induced deposition of C3 on the sperm surface in the presence of human C. Incubation of motile sperm with C-fixing immune sera resulted in a significant loss (43 to 87%) of motility associated with characteristic C5b-9-induced alterations in sperm morphology leading ultimately to sperm lysis. When motile sperm were cocultured with purified polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) in the presence of C-fixing immune sera, the binding of sperm heads to the PMN resulted in the formation of sperm rosettes, whereas non C-fixing or control sera had no such effect. Transmission electron microscopy of thin sections of the rosettes revealed ingestion of the sperm by the human PMN. These data suggested that 1) antibody bound to sperm is capable of activating autologous C by the classical pathway; 2) binding of both IgG and C proteins initiates C3-mediated sperm binding to PMN and sperm inactivation by deposition of membrane attack complex (MC5b-9) of C; and 3) concomitant detection of sperm-bound IgG, C3d, and C5b-9 may serve as an indicator of C-fixing cytotoxic ASA in the sera of infertile couples.

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