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A Quality Control Mechanism To Tag And Remove Defective Sperm Cells Print E-mail
Science - Biological Sciences
TS-Si News Service   
Sunday, 03 August 2008 17:00
Human Sperm
Human Sperm
 
Sperm is the name for male reproductive cells (Gr. σπέρμα, sperma or "seed"). A cell that is motile is also referred to as spermatozoon (uniflagellar sperm). The male gonads (testicles) produce spermatozoa through meiosis (spermatogenesis).
 
Sperm cells cannot divide and have a limited life span, but they can fuse with egg cells during fertilization to form a zygote with the potential to develop into a new organism. The human sperm cell has one-half of the genetic material necessary for fertilization. It is a haploid, providing a single set of 23 chromosomes that can join the 23 chromosomes of the female egg to form a diploid cell.
 
A healthy sperm cell consists of a head, a midpiece and a tail.
 
• The head is the nucleus with densely coiled contents that contain enzymes for penetrating the female egg.
 
• The midpiece has a central filamentous core with many mitochondria spiralled around it, suitable for transit through the female cervix, uterus and uterine tubes.
 
• The tail (flagellum) propels the spermatocyte with lashing movements. It consists of microtubules in an extension of the cell membrane.
 
Mammalian sperm cells can live inside the female for a limited time (often cited as 3 days) unless it is exposed to air or is mixed with another liquid. The ability of semen, the ejaculate that carries sperm, to accomplish fertilization is measured by semen quality. It combines both sperm quantity and quality onto one measurement.
 
Note however, that this metric does not speak to the inherent genetic viability of the sperm. High quality semen can result in fertilization, but with the poential for various birth conditions and diseases.
 

 
Denmark leads a global market for sperm, with a well-developed system of export that advertises high sperm quality and anonymity. Worldwide, more than 50 countries import sperm, including Hong Kong, Kenya, Paraguay, and the United States.
Columbia, MO, USA. Attempts to understand human development begin with the production of eggs and sperm, the initiators of fertilization and a possible embryo. Numerous error correction mechanisms exist throughout the human body, activated by progenitor cells further up the timeline near fertilization. This works in most cases; sometimes not.
 
Occasional mishaps render these mechanisms insufficient to ensure that the human blueprint is fully realized. But the source of the blueprints — for both the body plan and the corrective mechanisms — track back to the fertilized embryo. Most research has focused on egg quality, but that has begun to change with a recent emphasis on the quality of human sperm in the reproductive process. [N1]
 

Mechanism of extracellular ubiquitination in the mammalian epididymis. Kathleen M. Baska, Gaurishankar Manandhar, Dawn Feng, Yuksel Agca, Mark W. Tengowski, Miriam Sutovsky, Young-Joo Yi, Peter Sutovsky. Journal of Cellular Physiology 215(3) 684-696. doi: 10.1002 / jcp.21349

 
Defective sperm cells do not pass through the body unnoticed. A new University of Missouri (MU) study provides evidence that the body recognizes and tags defective sperm cells while they undergo maturation in the epididymis (a sperm storage gland attached to the testis). The study was published in the Journal of Cellular Physiology.
 
According to researchers, only sperm that have the highest chance of succeeding in fertilization will survive the production process without a "tag." This does not mean, however, that the sperm are of uniformly high quality. Their success derives from having made the trip.
 
Peter Sutovsky, associate professor of animal sciences, clinical obstetrics and gynecology in the MU College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources.
A small protein called ubiquitin [N2] marks abnormal sperm cells, including cells that have two heads, two tails or are otherwise misshaped. This "recycling tag" on the sperm cell tells the body which cells need to be broken back down into amino acids. This provides evidence that there is an active removal process or marking of defective sperm during the epididymal passage.
 
"Fertilization is, in a way, a numbers game," said Peter Sutovsky, associate professor of animal sciences, clinical obstetrics and gynecology in the MU College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources.
 
"You need a certain number of normal sperm cells to reach the egg. If too many are tagged with ubiquitin, there may be not enough to fertilize an egg."
 
This study suggests that the male reproductive system must be able to evaluate and control the quality of the sperm to insure an optimal chance of fertilization. High levels of ubiquitin in the sperm can indicate low-sperm count or infertility. This process of quality control has been found in both humans and other mammals including bulls, boars and rats.
 
"In many cases, the cells that are tagged with ubiquitin are obviously abnormal with two tails or two heads, but many of them look like they don't have defects," Sutovsky said. "Oftentimes, these cells may look normal but lack proteins that are important to fertility."
 
Once sperm cells are tagged as defective, it is unlikely that the process can be reversed. Sutovsky stresses the importance of a healthy lifestyle to reduce the likelihood of abnormal sperm cells. He suggests avoiding exposure to toxic chemicals, abstaining from smoking and maintaining a healthy diet. He suggests people who work with toxins on a daily basis should minimize their exposure by wearing protective clothing and respirators.
 


[N1] This research was funded by the Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service at the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), the USDA National Research Initiative Competitive Grants Program, Pfizer, Inc., the Korea Science and Engineering Foundation (KOSEF), and the Food for the 21st Century Program of the University of Missouri-Columbia.

[N2] Ubiquitin is a highly-conserved regulatory protein. Originally referred to as Ubiquitous Immunopoietic Polypeptide, it as identified in 1975 as a protein of unknown function (8.5-kDa) that is universally expressed in living cells. Work in the 1980s to elucidate the basic functions of ubiquitin and the components of the ubiquitination pathway resulted in a Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2004) for Aaron Ciechanover, Avram Hershko, and Irwin Rose.

 


Mechanism of extracellular ubiquitination in the mammalian epididymis. Kathleen M. Baska, Gaurishankar Manandhar, Dawn Feng, Yuksel Agca, Mark W. Tengowski, Miriam Sutovsky, Young-Joo Yi, Peter Sutovsky. Journal of Cellular Physiology 215(3) 684-696. doi: 10.1002 / jcp.21349

Abstract

Posttranslational modification by ubiquitination marks defective or outlived intracellular proteins for proteolytic degradation by the 26S proteasome. The ATP-dependent, covalent ligation and formation of polyubiquitin chains on substrate proteins requires the presence and activity of a set of ubiquitin activating and conjugating enzymes. While protein ubiquitination typically occurs in the cell cytosol or nucleus, defective mammalian spermatozoa become ubiquitinated on their surface during post-testicular sperm maturation in the epididymis, suggesting an active molecular mechanism for sperm quality control. Consequently, we hypothesized that the bioactive constituents of ubiquitin-proteasome pathway were secreted in the mammalian epididymal fluid (EF) and capable of ubiquitinating extrinsic substrates. Western blotting indeed detected the presence of the ubiquitin-activating enzyme E1 and presumed E1-ubiquitin thiol-ester intermediates, ubiquitin-carrier enzyme E2 and presumed E2-ubiquitin thiol-ester intermediates and the ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase PGP 9.5/UCHL1 in the isolated bovine EF. Thiol-ester assays utilizing recombinant ubiquitin-activating and ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes, biotinylated substrates, and isolated bovine EF confirmed the activity of the ubiquitin activating and conjugating enzymes within EF. Ubiquitinated proteins were found to be enriched in the defective bull sperm fraction and appropriate proteasomal deubiquitinating and proteolytic activities were measured in the isolated EF by specific fluorescent substrates. The apocrine secretion of cytosolic proteins was visualized in transgenic mice and rats expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) under the direction of ubiquitin-C promoter. Accumulation of eGFP, ubiquitin and proteasomes was detected in the apical blebs, the apocrine secretion sites of the caput epididymal epithelia of both the rat and mouse epididymal epithelium, although region-specific differences exist. Secretion of eGFP and proteasomes continued during the prolonged culture of the isolated rat epididymal epithelial cells in vitro. This study provides evidence that the activity of the ubiquitin system is not limited to the intracellular environment, contributing to a greater understanding of the sperm maturation process during epididymal passage.

 
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Last Updated on Sunday, 03 August 2008 14:56