Abstract
Seminal plasma from 22 men attending an infertility clinic was subjected to preparative ultracentrifugation for 2 h at 105,000 g. The pelleted material as well as the supernatant thus obtained were investigated with regard to prostasome membrane-linked enzyme activities in relation to other semen parameters. The mean activity of Zn2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase in the sedimented prostasome fraction was 1.45 +/- 1.02 mumol (range 0.29-4.79) orthophosphate released per milligram protein and 20 min, while the corresponding figures for the supernatant were 0.56 +/- 0.30 (range 0.12-1.29). Hence, 72% of the specific activity was sedimented, and 28% remained in the supernatant. The same pattern was recognized with regard to the other two enzymes investigated, although they displayed individual characteristics with regard to distribution after ultracentrifugation. The pelleted prostasome-linked mean aminopeptidase activity was 0.39 U/mg protein (81.9%), with only 0.087 U (18.1%) remaining in the supernatant. The corresponding figures for gamma-glutamyltransferase were 7.89 (60.4%) and 5.17 (39.6%) mu kat/g protein, respectively. The different enzyme activities in the prostasome fraction and supernatant, respectively, were interrelated to each other and correlated significantly with r values between 0.73 and 0.93 (p less than 0.001). It was concluded that a minor fraction of prostasomes remained in the supernatant after ultracentrifugation. A relationship existed between prostasomes and semen volume revealing a rather consistent pattern in that small volumes favoured the presence of comparatively more prostasomes in the supernatant and less prostasomes in the pelleted fraction than large volumes. In addition, the sperm concentration seemed to be another determinant of the distribution of prostasomes in seminal plasma on subsequent ultracentrifugation.
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