Abstract

AbstractThe contents of the oviducts of ewes were recovered by flushing with small volumes of culture medium, 22½–24¼ hr after mating. The ampulla was flushed separately from the uterotubal junction and isthmus. Among the motile spermatozoa recovered, a proportion exhibited “hyperactivated” motility, also known as “activated”, or “whiplash” motility. This was characterized by increased flexion of the neck, increased amplitude of the flagellar waves, and marked asymmetry of beat. Two types of hyperactivation appeared: in the first, spermatozoa swam in a repetitive, nonprogressive circling pattern and appeared to have intact acrosome caps; in the second, the spermatozoa showed a propensity to stick to glass by the equatorial segment and most had modified or missing acrosome caps. The proportions of motile spermatozoa exhibiting hyperactivation were greatest in the ampullae, as were the proportions with modified or absent acrosomes. Hyperactivation is a capacitation‐associated phenomenon that has now been reported for one or more species from seven orders of eutherian mammals. It may well be a universal aspect of the prefertilization behavior of mammalian spermatozoa and is probably of advantage to the fertilizing spermatozoon within the oviduct.

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