The pattern of proteins in the soluble fraction of the cytoplasm of the rat epididymis was studied by acrylamide gel electrophoresis. The components of five distinct bands, labelled A, B, C, D and E, were found to be sensitive to changes in androgen in the blood. Castration for 14 days produced a sharp decrease in the colour intensity of bands B-E when stained with Amido black. After 21 days of castration, bands D and E were undetectable, bands B and C were severely diminished and band A was more intense. Seven days of replacement with testosterone (1 mg/day) induced a return towards a normal pattern. The degree of restoration was inversely proportional to the duration of castration. Quantitation by densitometry showed that the relative contributions of bands B-E to the region A-E were 61% in the control rat, only 27% after 21 days of castration and 35% when testosterone was given between days 14 and 21 of castration. The components of bands A-E are presumed to be proteins since the electrophoretic pattern was altered by digestion with pronase but not by ribonuclease, phospholipase C or neuraminidase. Epididymides from castrated and androgen-treated castrated rats were incubated with 14C- and 3H-labelled mixed amino acids respectively. After co-electrophoresis the ratio 3H: 14C rose from a baseline of 2-5 in band B, 32 in band C and 7 in bands D and E. Molecular weights were estimated as 27900 for B, 23100 for C and 34400 for D. Band A had the same electrophoretic mobility as serum albumin. Bands B and C were also present in testicular cytosol. Bands D and E were only found in the epididymis, localized mainly within the lumen of the tubules. Bands B-E increased with age during sexual maturation, bands D and E became detectable in the 20-day-old rats. Preliminary evidence indicates that the proteins in bands C, D and E can be removed from caput spermatozoa by washing.
Our results indicate that heparin's decondensing ability in vitro is related to sulphation characteristics of the molecule and suggest that heparan sulphate, a structural analogue of heparin, could be a sperm-decondensing agent in vivo.
Antiserum against rat androgen-dependent secretory epididymal protein DE (raised in rabbit) was added to suspensions of rat spermatozoa from the cauda epididymidis which were used for artificial insemination. While control spermatozoa fertilized 41.6% of oocytes, those exposed to antiserum to protein DE fertilized only 6.6% (P less than 0.01). An equal amount of normal rabbit serum (NRS) did not cause inhibition (33.1%). To study the entry of antibodies into the epididymis, caudal tubules were cultured for 24 h and the fertility of the contained spermatozoa was assessed by artificial insemination. Culture in Medium 199 alone or with NRS resulted in spermatozoa which fertilized 52% of oocytes while the presence of antiserum to protein DE in the culture medium yielded spermatozoa which fertilized only 16.6% of oocytes (P less than 0.01). These results suggest (1) that the epididymal protein DE might be part of a sperm structure involved in the fertilization process, and (2) that, at least under the present culture conditions, immunoglobulins penetrate the epididymal epithelium in sufficient numbers to reduce fertility significantly.
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