Abstract

AbstractEpididymal sperm of the mouse, rat, and guinea pig and ejaculated sperm of rabbits are cleaved at the head‐tail junction by an extract of Nereis virens. Annelids are extracted with water and the extract is purified by ion exchange chromatography. Electron microscopy shows that the extract acts on the filaments connecting the capitulum of the tail with the basal plate lining the nuclear envelope. Following detachment, the basal plate remains with the head. The extract contains proteases as indicated by hydrolysis of tosyl arginine methyl ester (TAME), benzoyl arginine ethyl ester (BAEE), and Azocoll, a general protease substrate. The hydrolysis of TAME is inhibited by tosyl lysine chloromethyl ketone (TLCK), a trypsin inhibitor, but TLCK does not prevent head‐tail separation by the Nereis extract. Similarly tosyl phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone (TPCK), a chymotrypsin inhibitor, and phosphoramidon and leucyltryptophan, both thermolysin and acrolysin inhibitors — singly or in combination — do not prevent hydrolysis of Azocoll. Head‐tail separation activity of the extract was inhibited by dithiothreitol, which reduces disulfide bonds, and phenylmethyl sulfonyl fluoride, an inhibitor of serine proteases. These results indicate that the extract is a mixture of proteases, one being a serine protease similar to trypsin.Digestion of the connecting filaments with the pure proteases, trypsin and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, has yielded the following information on the proteins of the filaments. The accessibility of arginine and/or lysine peptide bonds to enzyme action is highest in rat sperm filaments, whereas those in the filaments of mouse, rabbit, and guinea pig sperm are less accessible than in the rat. Another possibility is that the total content of arginine and/or lysine varies between the species. The most dramatic difference is the enzymatic action on glutamyl peptide bonds of the filaments, the order being: mouse 〉 rat 〉 rabbit, with guinea pig sperm filaments completely resistant over the time course of the experiment.

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