Freshly ejaculated sperm acquire the fertilizing potential by a continuing process that occurs during sperm transport through the female genital tract, and it is physiologically not complete until the spermatozoon reaches the oocyte. The process termed capacitation can be mimicked in vitro by using appropriate capacitation media. Despite its importance, the molecular mechanisms underlying capacitation are poorly understood. This work deals with a proteomic approach to the analysis of protein profile variations in human normospermic samples as a consequence of three hours in vitro capacitation. 2DE gels were produced per freshly ejaculated sperm and per capacitated sperm and several quantitative and qualitative significant variations were found. Among the MS obtained identifications, proteins with a significant decrease after capacitation were found to be involved in protein fate, metabolism, and flagellar organization; on the contrary, increasing proteins were found to be related to cellular stress. Interestingly, the detected flagellar organization proteins decreased during capacitation whereas their corresponding fragments increased. A swim-up selected and three-hour capacitated sperm subpopulation has also been resolved by 2DE, and its synthetic gel has been analyzed for the variations observed in the entire sperm population. An immunofluorescence analysis of this sperm typology was carried out with antiactin and antitubulin antibodies.
Gp20 is a sialylglycoprotein of the human sperm surface related to maturation and capacitation and is homologous to CD52, a glycosyl- phosphatidyl-inositol (GPI)-anchored protein highly expressed in lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, and epididymal cells, described by the monoclonal antibody family CAMPATH. The CAMPATH antigen is characterized by a very short peptide (12 amino acids) and an N-linked oligosaccharide chain bound to the asparagine located in the third position and a GPI anchor bound to the C-terminal serine. The CAMPATH epitope includes three amino acids at the C-terminus and part of the GPI anchor. It has been suggested that anti-gp20 interacts with the same peptide recognized by CAMPATH antibodies but with a different epitope, since it describes the corresponding antigen in a different way. For example, it localizes the corresponding antigen in the equatorial region of the sperm head when sperm are capacitated, whereas CAMPATH antibodies bind all over the sperm surface. Our results indicate that the anti-gp20 epitope does not include the peptide backbone, the GPI anchor, or the N-glycans but consists of O-linked oligosaccharide chains bound to a unique CD52 glycoform present both in sperm and leukocytes. This is suggested by results obtained using many different approaches, such as immunoblot analysis of gp20 after removal of N- and O-glycans and after jacalin (Artocarpus integrifolia agglutinin)-affinity chromatography.
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