Yong-Gang Duan, U. P. Wehry, B. A. Buhren, H. Schrumpf, P. Oláh, E. Bünemann, C.-F. Yu, S.-J. Chen, A. Müller, J. Hirchenhain, A. Lierop Van, N. Novak, Zhi-Ming Cai, J. S. Krüssel, H.-C. Schuppe, G. Haidl, P. A. Gerber, J.-P. Allam, B. Homey
Biology of Reproduction 103 (3), 630-642, (15 May 2020) https://doi.org/10.1093/biolre/ioaa072
KEYWORDS: acrosome reaction, capacitation, chemotaxis, cumulus cells, fertility, granulosa cells, Male infertility, ovulatory cycle, seminal plasma, sperm capacitation, sperm motility and transport
The interaction of sperm with the oocyte is pivotal during the process of mammalian fertilization. The limited numbers of sperm that reach the fallopian tube as well as anatomic restrictions indicate that human sperm–oocyte encounter is not a matter of chance but a directed process. Chemotaxis is the proposed mechanism for re-orientating sperm toward the source of a chemoattractant and hence to the oocyte. Chemokines represent a superfamily of small (8–11 kDa), cytokine-like proteins that have been shown to mediate chemotaxis and tissue-specific homing of leukocytes through binding to specific chemokine receptors such as CCRs. Here we show that CCR6 is abundantly expressed on human sperms and in human testes. Furthermore, radioligand-binding experiments showed that CCL20 bound human sperm in a specific manner. Conversely, granulosa cells of the oocyte-surrounding cumulus complex as well as human oocytes represent an abundant source of the CCR6-specific ligand CCL20. In human ovaries, CCL20 shows a cycle-dependent expression pattern with peak expression in the preovulatory phase and CCL20 protein induces chemotactic responses of human sperm. Neutralization of CCL20 in ovarian follicular fluid significantly impairs sperm migratory responses. Conversely, analyses in infertile men with inflammatory conditions of the reproductive organs demonstrate a significant increase of CCL20/CCR6 expression in testis and ejaculate. Taken together, findings of the present study suggest that CCR6-CCL20 interaction may represent an important factor in directing sperm–oocyte interaction.
Graphical Abstract
Summary Sentence
The chemokine CCL20 is produced by human oocytes as well as surrounding cumulus granulosa cells and induces chemotaxis of CCR6+ sperm. Infertile male donors demonstrate increased levels of CCL20 in testis and seminal fluid, which may negatively influence sperm–oocyte interaction.