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1 April 2007 Redox Regulation of Sperm Surface Thiols Modulates Adhesion to the Fallopian Tube Epithelium
Riccardo Talevi, Maria Zagami, Marianna Castaldo, Roberto Gualtieri
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Abstract

Sperm that adhere to the fallopian tube epithelium are of superior quality and adhesion extends their fertile life. It has been postulated that periovulatory signals, as yet undefined, promote sperm release. In the in vitro studies described here, we examined the effects of several antioxidants, reportedly present within oviductal fluid, on the modulation of sperm-oviduct adhesion in bovine species. Results showed that 1) the cell-permeant thiols (penicillamine, beta mercaptoethanol, cysteine, and dithiotreitol), as well as the nonpermeant thiol, reduced glutathione, cause adhering spermatozoa to release from the epithelium; 2) thiol action is exerted on spermatozoa; and 3) oxidized glutathione, as well as the non-thiol antioxidants (dimethylthiourea, trolox, superoxide dismutase, and catalase) have no effect. Sperm surface sulfhydryls labeled with iodoacetamide fluorescein showed that spermatozoa devoid of sulfhydryls on the head surface adhered to the fallopian epithelium in vitro, whereas thiol-induced release increased the exposure of sulfhydryls on the sperm head surface. Finally, analysis of capacitation status demonstrated that uncapacitated spermatozoa adhered to the oviduct, and that thiol-induced release of spermatozoa was accompanied by capacitation. In conclusion, thiol-reducing agents in the oviductal fluid may modulate the redox status of sperm surface proteins, leading to the release of spermatozoa selected and stored through adhesion to the fallopian tube epithelium in the bovine species.

Riccardo Talevi, Maria Zagami, Marianna Castaldo, and Roberto Gualtieri "Redox Regulation of Sperm Surface Thiols Modulates Adhesion to the Fallopian Tube Epithelium," Biology of Reproduction 76(4), 728-735, (1 April 2007). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.106.056028
Received: 24 July 2006; Accepted: 1 December 2006; Published: 1 April 2007
KEYWORDS
bovine
female reproductive tract
gamete biology
oviduct
Redox
sperm
sperm motility and transport
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