Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to determine whether Octopus vulgaris spermatozoa are activated by progesterone stimulation. Spermatozoa were collected from the spermatophores in the Needham's sac of the male (MS) and from the spermathecae of oviducal glands of the female (FS). We used transmission (TEM) and scanning (SEM) electron microscopy to study the morphology of untreated, Ca2+ ionophore A23187 and progesterone-treated MS spermatozoa, and untreated FS spermatozoa. We showed that ionophore and progesterone stimulation of MS spermatozoa induce breakdown of the membranes overlapping the acrosomal region, exposing the spiralized acrosome. These modifications resemble the acrosome reaction observed in other species. FS stored in the spermathecae did not show the membranes covering the acrosomal region present in the MS spermatozoa. When ionophore and progesterone treatments were performed in Ca2+-free artificial sea water, no changes were observed, suggesting the role of external calcium in modifying membrane morphology. Lectin studies showed a different fluorescence distribution and membrane arrangement of FS-untreated spermatozoa with respect to the MS, suggesting that spermatozoa transferred in the female genital tract after mating, are stored in a pre-activated state. The plasma membrane of the untreated MS and FS spermatozoa was labelled with Progesterone-BSA-FITC, indicating the presence of plasma membrane progesterone receptor. Taken together these data suggest that progesterone induces an acrosome- like reaction in MS spermatozoa similar to that induced by calcium elevation. In addition progesterone may play a role in the pre-activation of spermatozoa stored in the female tract, further supporting the hypothesized parallelism between cephalopods and vertebrates.
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