Abstract
AbstractProacrosin and acrosin were localized immunocytochemically at the electron microscope level in ram spermatozoa undergoing an ionophore‐induced acrosome reaction. Antigenicity was preserved after fixation with 0.5% w/v ethyl‐(dimethylaminopropyl)‐carbodimide, and an antibody preparation was used that reacted with all major forms of ram acrosin. All stages of the acrosome reaction could be observed in a single preparation. At the earliest stage, labeling was observed throughout the acrosomal contents, which were just beginning to disperse. As dispersal proceeded, labeling diminished, being associated only with visible remnants of the acrosomal matrix. By the time the acrosome had emptied, almost no labeling could be detected on the inner acrosomal membrane.The relationship between matrix dispersal and proacrosin activation was studied in isolated ram sperm heads. While proacrosin was prevented from activating, the acrosomal matrix remained compact; but as activation proceeded, the matrix decondensed and dispersed in close parallel. By the time proacrosin activation was complete, the acrosomal contents had almost entirely disappeared.We conclude that proacrosin is distributed throughout the acrosomal contents as an intrinsic constituent of the acrosomal matrix. During the acrosome reaction, proacrosin activation occurs, resulting directly in decondensation of the matrix. All the contents of the acrosome including acrosin disperse and, by the time the acrosome is empty and the acrosomal cap is lost, only occasional traces of acrosin remain on the inner acrosomal membrane. Since the acrosomal cap is normally lost during the earliest stages of zona penetration, acrosin's role in fertilization is unclear: it does not appear to be a zona lysin bound to the inner acrosomal membrane.
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