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1 February 2003 Real-Time Observations of Individual Macaque Sperm Undergoing Tight Binding and the Acrosome Reaction on the Zona Pellucida
Theodore L. Tollner, Ashley I. Yudin, Gary N. Cherr, James W. Overstreet
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Abstract

Changes in binding affinity, acrosomal status, and motility of living sperm on the zona pellucida were for the first time in any mammalian species directly observed and analyzed with video microscopy. A single zona was air-dried and rehydrated on a microscope slide, and a coverslip supported by glass beads was added. Capacitated sperm were added together with Alexa-SBTI, a probe for acrosin that can detect the acrosome reaction. The heads of loosely attached sperm oscillated on the zona and the flagella beat symmetrically with a sigmoid-shaped waveform. Tight binding was observed after 16 sec as the sperm head became fixed in place on the zona. The shape of the flagellar beat simultaneously shifted to a more rigid, C-shaped waveform. The first signs of the acrosome reaction were detected within 11 sec of tight binding. Rapid flushing removed approximately 65% of sperm that were loosely attached but only 2% of those that were tightly bound. In the 2 min following the onset of tight binding, the lateral displacement of the flagellum increased by approximately 30% and the beat frequency decreased by 25%. Lignosulfonic acid (LSA) inhibited loose sperm attachment and the development of tight binding. LSA had no effect on the time of the acrosome reaction following tight binding or on changes in motility that followed tight binding. These data suggest that LSA affects the initial attachment or docking of sperm to the zona, a step that may align or recruit one or more specific zona receptors to be responsible for mediating the acrosome reaction.

Theodore L. Tollner, Ashley I. Yudin, Gary N. Cherr, and James W. Overstreet "Real-Time Observations of Individual Macaque Sperm Undergoing Tight Binding and the Acrosome Reaction on the Zona Pellucida," Biology of Reproduction 68(2), 664-672, (1 February 2003). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.102.009175
Received: 10 July 2002; Accepted: 1 September 2002; Published: 1 February 2003
KEYWORDS
acrosome reaction
fertilization
sperm
sperm capacitation
sperm motility and transport
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