Testicular maturation and sperm production throughout the life of the male form the basis of male fertility. It is difficult to elucidate the intricate processes controlling testicular maturation and spermatogenesis in primates in vivo due to the long time span required for sexual maturation and also to the lack of accessible in vitro or in vivo models of primate spermatogenesis. Ectopic xenografting of neonatal testis tissue into mice provides an accessible model to study and manipulate the propagation and differentiation of male germ cells from immature donor animals. However, it was not clear whether this approach would be applicable to slowly maturing primates. Here we report that grafting of testis tissue from immature rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) into host mice resulted in the acceleration of testicular maturation and production of fertilization-competent sperm in testis xenografts. The system reported here provides a powerful, practical approach to study timing and control of testicular maturation and regulation of primate spermatogenesis without the necessity for experimentation in primates. This approach could potentially be applied to produce fertile sperm from sexually immature individuals of rare or valuable primate species or from prepubertal boys undergoing sterilizing therapy for cancer.
The hyaluronic acid (HA)-rich extracellular matrix (ECM) of the cumulus oophorus is known to facilitate fertilisation. It has been suggested that HA may enhance fertilisation in a number of species, and in macaque sperm, HA has been shown to increase the number of acrosome reactions that follow sperm binding to the zona pellucida. In this study, we investigated the effects of HA on intracellular Ca2+ in capacitated cynomolgus macaque sperm. Fluorometry studies using the intracellular Ca2+ indicator Fluo-3 showed that addition of 100 μg/ml of HA induced a rapid increase in intracellular Ca2+. This Ca2+ increase (approximately 2–3 times above basal levels) was inhibited by preincubation of sperm with Fab fragments of anti-recombinant PH-20 IgG. The frequency of acrosome reactions in sperm exposed to HA was not above control levels. A synthetic gel was prepared with similar viscosity to the cumulus and with HA trapped in its matrix. Video imaging of individual sperm was used to demonstrate that capacitated sperm swimming into the HA gel had increased intracellular Ca2+ levels. Preincubation of sperm with Fab fragments of anti-PH-20 IgG inhibited the increased intracellular Ca2+ levels induced by the HA gel. Sperm in control gel (no HA) did not show increased intracellular Ca2+, while sperm in gel containing anti-PH-20 IgG showed increased Ca2+ (positive control). Sperm loaded with Fluo-3 were allowed to interact with cynomologus macaque cumulus masses, and sperm within the cumulus ECM clearly showed increased intracellular Ca2+ that was inhibited when sperm were preincubated in anti-PH-20 Fab. Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-HA was found to bind to sperm over the acrosomal region, corresponding to PH-20 localisation, and this binding could be inhibited by preincubation of sperm with anti-PH-20 fragments. The results of this study show that HA increases intracellular Ca2+ in macaque sperm through interaction with plasma membrane PH-20. We propose that HA binding to plasma membrane PH-20 induces an aggregation of receptors that in turn results in intracellular signalling. As a result, sperm have higher basal CA2+ levels and are more responsive to induction of the acrosome reaction after binding to the zona pellucida.
Different protocols incorporating methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MBCD) and reduced glutathione (GSH) have been reported to improve IVF recovery of cryopreserved mouse sperm on a C57BL/6 (J and N) genetic background. However, it is not clear which IVF protocol is most appropriate when using the various methods to cryorecover sperm with different sperm quality and sample volumes. Therefore, in the present study we correlated sperm motility with fertilization rate and compared the efficiency of different IVF methods using various sperm samples so as to establish general guidelines for mouse sperm cryorecovery by IVF. High linear correlation between sperm fertilization rate and progressive motility was found, R2 was 0.9623 and 0.9993 for pre-freezing and post-thaw progressive motility, respectively. High amounts of cryoprotective agent (CPA) were observed to impair both sperm capacitation and fertilization. Moreover, the presence of a large number of immotile sperm in the sperm-oocyte co-incubation drop was found to reduce IVF success which could be partially reversed by supplementation using monothioglycerol (MTG) during centrifugation. It was concluded that the efficiency of IVF using cryorecovered mouse sperm in media containing MBCD and GSH can be predicted from sperm progressive motility. High concentrations of CPA and immotile sperm should be mitigated prior to IVF. The optimum IVF method should be selected based on sperm sample volume and sperm parameters.
Preparations of sperm membranes (plasma membranes and outer acrosomal membranes) and denuded sperm heads were isolated from macaque sperm, and the PH-20 proteins present were characterized by Western blotting, hyaluronic acid substrate gel analysis, and a microplate assay for hyaluronidase activity. Because we have shown previously that PH-20 is located on the plasma membrane and not on the outer acrosomal membrane, the PH-20 in the membrane preparations was presumed to be plasma membrane . PM-PH-20 had an apparent molecular weight of 64 kDa and the optimum pH for its hyaluronidase activity was 6.5. The PH-20 associated with denuded sperm heads was localized by immunogold label to the persistent inner acrosomal membrane (IAM) and was presumed to be IAM-PH-20, which included a major 64 kDa form and a minor 53 kDa form. The 53 kDa form was not detected in extracts of denuded sperm heads from acrosome intact sperm that were boiled in nonreducing sample buffer, but was present in extracts of sperm heads from acrosome reacted sperm and in the soluble material released during the acrosome reaction, whether or not the samples were boiled. Substrate gel analysis showed that the hyaluronidase activity of the 53 kDa form of PH-20 was greatest at acid pH, and this activity was probably responsible for the broader and lower optimum pH of IAM hyaluronidase activity. When hypotonic treatment was used to disrupt the sperm acrosome and release the acrosomal contents, less than 0.05% of the total hyaluronidase activity was released. The PH-20 protein released by hypotonic treatment was the 64 kDa form and not the 53 kDa form, suggesting that its source might be the disrupted plasma membranes. Our experiments suggest that the soluble form of hyaluronidase, which is released at the time of the acrosome reaction, is derived from the IAM. This soluble hyaluronidase is composed of both the 64 kDa form and 53 kDa form of PH-20. The 53 kDa form appears to be processed from the 64 kDa form at the time of the acrosome reaction.
In this study, we investigated the functions of PH-20 and acrosin during the interaction of macaque sperm with the zona pellucida. Both of these sperm enzymes have been reported to be present on the inner acrosomal membrane of acrosome reacted sperm, and have been suggested to play a role during secondary sperm-zona binding in other species. Anti-macaque PH-20 IgG, anti-pig acrosin IgG and soybean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI) were used as probes for immunolocalization of the two proteins at the ultrastructural level, and as reagents for blocking sperm penetration of the macaque zona pellucida in vitro. As a control, we performed similar studies with antibodies to CD-46, which is also located on the inner acrosomal membrane, but has no known function in sperm-zona pellucida interaction. After labeling with anti-acrosin IgG, gold label was not present on the sperm surface before the acrosome reaction, but was detected over the entire head of sperm that were induced to acrosome react with calcium ionophore A23187. In contrast, when sperm were induced to acrosome react by binding to intact zona pellucida, acrosin was present in the acrosomal shroud but not on the inner acrosomal membrane. Similar results were obtained when SBTI was used as a probe for enzyme localization. PH-20 and CD-46 were demonstrated on the inner acrosomal membrane of sperm induced to acrosome react by ionophore treatment and by zona binding. Neither anti-acrosin IgG nor anti-CD-46 IgG affected sperm penetration of the zona at concentrations up to 300 microg/ml, but zona penetration was blocked completely when anti-PH-20 IgG (100 microg/ml) was present during sperm-oocyte interaction. Ultrastructural observations of oocytes incubated with anti-PH-20 IgG showed that acrosomal shrouds were present on the zona surface but no sperm had begun to penetrate into the zona substance. We conclude that anti-PH-20 IgG prevented sperm penetration of the macaque zona pellucida by interference with secondary sperm-zona binding, rather than primary sperm-zona binding or the zona-induced acrosome reaction. Acrosin was not detected on the inner acrosomal membrane of sperm that are induced to acrosome react after zona binding, and acrosin does not appear to be critical for sperm penetration of the macaque zona pellucida.
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