Abstract

Single-step purification of boar sperm P68/62 that is cross-reactive with a polyclonal antibody against sulfolipidimmobilizing protein 1 (SLIP1) was achieved by chromatofocusing. This method is useful for obtaining P68/62 in quantity. The two proteins, P68 and P62, were antigenically related, since the antibody generated specifically against the 68-kDa band reacted with both the 68- and 62-kDa bands. Like rat testis SLIP1, purified boar sperm P68/62 bound to sulfogalactosylglycerolipid (SGG) and inhibited sperm-egg binding in a dose-dependent manner when added exogenously to sperm-egg coincubates. This inhibitory effect occurred at the level of the zona pellucida (ZP), and further studies showed that biotinylated boar sperm P68/62 bound to the ZP of unfertilized mouse eggs. Furthermore, biotinylated boar sperm P68/62 bound to isolated ZP of unfertilized eggs from other species, including pig, rat, cat, dog, and human, as well as to ZP of intact fertilized mouse eggs and preimplantation embryos of various developmental stages, although the degree of its binding to the ZP of intact eight-cell embryos, morulae, and blastocysts was much lower than that of fertilized eggs and two-cell embryos. These results suggest that P68/62 of capacitated sperm must act together with other sperm surface proteins/molecules that regulate zona binding specificity within homologous species and in unfertilized eggs. Together with our previous findings, we suggest that rather than being a true ZP receptor, sperm P68/62 may be involved in the initial step of sperm-ZP binding that is adhesive in nature.

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