Abstract
Electron microscopic examination of the spermatozoa from a man suffering from asthenozoospermia (poor or low sperm motility) showed that approximately 92% of the sperm flagella lacked central pair microtubules but possessed dynein arms and radial spokes while a small percentage of the spermatozoa had complete flagella. The characteristics of the motor apparatus of the spermatozoa and the effects of caffeine on the sperm motility were examined, as were the reactivation of demembranated spermatozoa and the sliding of doublet microtubules. Almost all spermatozoa were immotile in a Tyrode solution while only a small percentage of spermatozoa showed slow forward movement or feeble flagellar vibration, whereas addition of caffeine to the sperm suspension induced forward swimming of approximately half of the spermatozoa. The reactivation of demembranated spermatozoa with MgATP(2-) could not succeed because of disintegration of the demembranated flagella. However, when the demembranated spermatozoa were exposed to MgATP(2-) and then treated with elastase, the microtubular doublets of approximately half the number of the flagella slid from the end or middle of the flagella. These results suggest that the motor apparatus in the sperm flagella that lack the central pair microtubules is functionally assembled and intrinsically capable of undergoing flagellar movement but not strong enough to beat normally.
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Published Version
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