Abstract

Fracture-label, surface-replica, and routine freeze-fracture techniques were used in combination with phospholipase A2-colloidal gold (PLA2-CG) and filipin as probes to study changes in the distribution of phospholipids and cholesterol, respectively, in morphologically defined plasma membrane domains of mouse spermatozoa during in vitro capacitation. In noncapacitated spermatozoa, quantitative analysis revealed that the fractured plasma membrane overlying the equatorial segment carried the highest PLA2-CG labeling density. The next highest labeling densities were found in the anterior acrosome region and the post-acrosomal region. On the external surface of the plasma membrane revealed by surface replicas, a uniform distribution of PLA2-CG was confined mainly to the acrosomal region of the head. The plasma membrane of the sperm tail had a relatively low labeling density for PLA2-CG. In freeze-fracture replicas of filipin-treated spermatozoa, the labeling density of filipin/sterol complexes (FSCs) was high in the plasma membrane over the acrosomal region where the FSCs were uniformly distributed. The postacrosomal region was weakly labeled. After in vitro capacitation, the densities of PLA2-CG and FSCs were significantly reduced in the fractured plasma membrane of the sperm head and the middle piece of the tail. However, surface replicas revealed an increased PLA2-CG labeling on the external surface of the plasma membrane covering the postacrosomal region, the middle piece, and the principal piece. Another major change detected in capacitated spermatozoa was the presence of small aggregates and patches of elevated, membrane-associated particles on the surface-replicated plasma membrane in the upper portion of the postacrosomal domain. Here the PLA2-CG labeling density was found to be higher than in noncapacitated spermatozoa. These results provide new information with respect to the reorganization and redistribution of phospholipids in specific regions of the plasma membrane during capacitation and provide further support for the concept that removal or loss of antifusigenic sterol from the sperm plasma membrane constitutes an important step of the capacitation process.

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