IBYME   02675
INSTITUTO DE BIOLOGIA Y MEDICINA EXPERIMENTAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Molecular mechanisms involved in gamete interaction.
Autor/es:
D.J. COHEN, V. DA ROS, D. BUSSO, J. MALDERA, N. GOLDWEIC, P.S. CUASNICU
Revista:
Animal Reproduction
Editorial:
Colegio Brasileiro de Reproducao Animal
Referencias:
Lugar: Belo Horizonte; Año: 2006 vol. 3 p. 127 - 129
ISSN:
180609614
Resumen:
Epididymal protein DE and testicular protein Tpx-1 are two cysteine-rich secretory proteins also known as CRISP1 and CRISP2, respectively.DE/CRISP1 is localized on the equatorial segment of acrosome-reacted sperm and participates in rat gamete fusion through its binding to egg-complementary sites.Recent results using bacterially-expressed recombinant fragments of DE as well as synthetic peptides revealed that the ability of DE to bind to the egg surface and inhibit gamete fusion resides in a region of 12 amino acids corresponding to an evolutionary conserved motif of the CRISP family named Signature 2. Interestingly, protein Tpx-1 exhibits only two substitutions in Signature 2 when compared to DE, and was also capable of binding to the rat egg, opening the possibility for a role of Tpx-1 in gamete fusion. Results showed the ability of recombinant Tpx-1 to significantly inhibit zona-free egg penetration, supporting the participation of this protein in gamete fusion through its interaction with egg-binding sites. Subsequent in vitro competition studies showed that incubation of zona-free eggs with a fixed concentration of recombinant Tpx-1 and increasing amounts of DE, gradually reduced the binding of recTpx-1 to the egg, indicating that both CRISPs would be sharing the egg complementary sites. The possible participation of both epididymal DE/CRISP1 and testicular Tpx-1/CRISP2 in gamete fusion provides important information on the molecular mechanisms involved in this process and supports the idea of a functional cooperation between homologue molecules as a mechanism to ensure the success of fertilization.