The plasma membrane of mammalian spermatozoa, like that of other differentiated cells, is compartmentalized into discrete regions or domains that are biochemically and functionally distinct from one another. Physical structures within the membrane, such as the posterior ring at the juncture of the sperm head and tail, have long been thought to act as diffusion barriers to help segregate important molecules required for fertilization within specific domains and to regulate migration of molecules between domains. In this investigation, we used a quantitative photobleaching technique (video-FRAP) to assess the efficacy of the posterior ring as a barrier to exchange of lipids between the postacrosomal and midpiece plasma membranes. A lipid reporter probe (1,1′-diduodecyl-3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindocarbocyanine; DiIC12) was incorporated into the plasma membrane of live ram and boar spermatozoa, and the directionality of its diffusion across the posterior ring was measured by line-profile analysis. Results showed that DiIC12 was able to traverse the posterior ring from the direction of the postacrosomal plasma membrane and to diffuse onto the midpiece plasma membrane. These results suggest that the posterior ring is not an immutable barrier to lipid exchange in mature spermatozoa and that there are other mechanisms for maintaining in-plane lipid asymmetry, such as differential phase behavior and interaction with the submembranous cytoskeleton.
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1 January 2001
Diffusion Barriers in Ram and Boar Sperm Plasma Membranes: Directionality of Lipid Diffusion Across the Posterior Ring
Alan R. Mackie,
Peter S. James,
Shab Ladha,
Roy Jones
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