INVESTIGADORES
DE BLAS Gerardo Andres
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
MAITOTOXIN INDUCES THE ACROSOME REACTION IN MAMMALIAN SPERM OPENING A DIFFERENT CHANNEL THAN THE ZONA PELLUCIDA.
Autor/es:
CHÁVEZ JC; DE BLAS GA; DE LA VEGA-BELTRÁN JL; NISHIGAKI T; CHIRINOS M; GONZÁLEZ-GONZÁLEZ ME; LARREA F; SOLÍS A; DARSZON A; TREVIÑO CL
Lugar:
Holderness, New Hampshire.
Reunión:
Congreso; Gordon Research Conference: Fertilization & Activation Of Development.; 2009
Institución organizadora:
Gordon Research Conference: Fertilization & Activation Of Development.
Resumen:
The acrosome reaction (AR), an absolute requirement for spermatozoa and egg fusion, requires the influx of Ca²(+) into the spermatozoa through voltage-dependent Ca²(+) channels and store-operated channels. Maitotoxin (MTx), a Ca²(+)-mobilizing agent, has been shown to be a potent inducer of the mouse sperm AR, with a pharmacology similar to that of the zona pellucida (ZP), possibly suggesting a common pathway for both inducers. Using recombinant human ZP3 (rhZP3), mouse ZP and two MTx channel blockers (U73122 and U73343), we investigated and compared the MTx- and ZP-induced ARs in human and mouse spermatozoa. Herein, we report that MTx induced AR and elevated intracellular Ca²(+) ([Ca²(+)](i)) in human spermatozoa, both of which were blocked by U73122 and U73343. These two compounds also inhibited the MTx-induced AR in mouse spermatozoa. In disagreement with our previous proposal, the AR triggered by rhZP3 or mouse ZP was not blocked by U73343, indicating that in human and mouse spermatozoa, the AR induction by the physiological ligands or by MTx occurred through distinct pathways. U73122, but not U73343 (inactive analogue), can block phospholipase C (PLC). Another PLC inhibitor, edelfosine, also blocked the rhZP3- and ZP-induced ARs. These findings confirmed the participation of a PLC-dependent signalling pathway in human and mouse zona protein-induced AR. Notably, edelfosine also inhibited the MTx-induced mouse sperm AR but not that of the human, suggesting that toxin-induced AR is PLC-dependent in mice and PLC-independent in humans.