Abstract

In cattle, sperm are stored in a reservoir in the caudal isthmus of the oviduct until the time of ovulation approaches. Bull sperm are trapped in the reservoir by binding to fucosylated molecules on the oviductal epithelium. Capacitated sperm lose binding affinity for the epithelium; therefore this study was undertaken to determine whether this occurs because capacitated bull sperm lose binding affinity for fucose. BSA conjugated to alpha-L-fucopyranosylphenyl isothiocyanate and fluorescein isothiocyanate (fuc-BSA-FITC) was used in conjunction with flow cytometry to monitor the capacity of bull sperm to bind fucose. Dead sperm were identified using ethidium homodimer and were excluded from analysis. BSA-FITC conjugated with mannose (man-BSA-FITC) and BSA-FITC were used as controls. When examined by epifluorescence microscopy, motile bull sperm that exhibited labeling by any of the probes were fluorescent over the acrosomal region of the plasma membrane. By flow cytometry, labeling of live sperm was greatest for sperm that had been washed in TALP medium and probed with fuc-BSA-FITC (mean +/- SD:167 +/- 6.0 relative fluorescence units, collected in logarithmic mode). Labeling by fuc-BSA-FITC was lower in unwashed sperm (60 +/- 2.7) and in washed sperm with seminal plasma added back (56 +/- 8.0). Labeling was also reduced by centrifuging washed sperm through a Percoll step gradient (103 +/- 6.3) and by capacitating washed sperm in medium containing 10 microg/ml heparin (50 +/- 4.4). BSA-FITC labeling was barely detectable in all treatments. Man-BSA-FITC produced little labeling of washed sperm (22 +/- 0.6), as expected; however, intense labeling appeared over the acrosomal region of sperm incubated under capacitating conditions (128 +/- 21.6). It was concluded that removal of seminal plasma exposes fucose-binding sites, which are then lost or modified during capacitation, thereby allowing the release of sperm from the reservoir. At that time, mannose-binding sites are revealed or activated, which might serve to bind sperm to the zona pellucida.

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