The muscarinic receptor agonist activities of NDMC are unique among antipsychotics, and provide a possible molecular basis for the superior clinical effects of clozapine pharmacotherapy.
Female hamsters were mated shortly after the onset of oestrus. At 3 or 6 h after mating, the right oviduct was flushed in situ with 30, 90 or 180 microliters medium to remove spermatozoa from the lumen, leaving only those firmly attached to the isthmic mucosa of the oviduct. When eggs were recovered from oviducts at 20 h after flushing the majority were fertilized, indicating that the spermatozoa that were firmly attached to the mucosa were capable of detaching and ascending to the ampulla to fertilize eggs. Neither the time of flushing nor the volume of flushing medium had a significant effect on the percentage of spermatozoa that remained in the isthmus after flushing. These results suggest that there is no change in the surface of the oviduct mucosa that causes the release of spermatozoa from the caudal isthmus near the time of ovulation. When incapacitated spermatozoa were introduced into the oviduct, many of them attached to oviductal mucosa, while capacitated spermatozoa did not. This indicates that it is a change in the sperm surface, rather than the mucosal surface, that causes the release of spermatozoa, i.e. spermatozoa remain attached to the isthmic mucosa until they become capacitated and then detach and migrate to the ampulla to fertilize the eggs.
Interaction of equine spermatozoa with oviductal epithelial cells (OEC) prolongs sperm viability and maintains low intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) in spermatozoa. Experiments were designed to investigate 1) whether release of spermatozoa from OEC in vitro is associated with elevated [Ca2+]i and 2) whether soluble products from OEC or direct membrane contact between spermatozoa and OEC mediates the effects of OEC on sperm [Ca2+]i. In the first experiment, changes in [Ca2+]i in spermatozoa loaded with indo-1 acetoxymethylester were determined in motile spermatozoa released from OEC monolayers after 4 h of culture compared to [Ca2+]i in spermatozoa still attached to OEC. In addition, [Ca2+]i was determined in spermatozoa incubated with OEC-conditioned medium for 6 h compared to that in spermatozoa incubated in control medium. [Ca2+]i was higher in motile spermatozoa released from OEC than in spermatozoa still attached to OEC after 4 h of incubation. Incubation in OEC-conditioned medium resulted in lower sperm [Ca2+]i only at 4 h of incubation, but not at 0.5, 2, or 6 h of incubation. In the second experiment, a suspension of apical plasma membrane vesicles (AMV) isolated from isthmic oviductal epithelium was used to study the specific effect of sperm contact with OEC membranes on sperm viability, capacitation, and [Ca2+]i. Direct membrane contact between spermatozoa and AMV prolonged sperm viability, delayed capacitation, and maintained low [Ca2+]i in spermatozoa. These results indicated that membrane contact between equine spermatozoa and OEC is required to maintain low [Ca2+]i, delay capacitation, and prolong viability of spermatozoa in vitro. Modulation of capacitation rate for spermatozoa stored in the isthmic sperm reservoir might ensure the availability of a competent sperm population at the time of fertilization.
The present study compares the development and quality of blastocysts derived from conventional oocyte insemination with those derived from intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Oocytes were collected from patients undergoing ovarian stimulation with human menopausal gonadotrophins for IVF. Patients with normal semen were assigned to conventional oocyte insemination while those with progressive motility <20% and/or normal sperm morphology < or =4% were assigned to ICSI. Resulting embryos were cultured for up to 6 days. The mean number and percentage of embryos reaching the blastocyst stage and the mean number and percentage of blastocysts of high quality on days 5-6 were assessed for both treatment groups and compared. The influence of paternal factors (sperm concentration, motility, progressive motility, morphology) on blastocyst development and quality were assessed by regression analyses. Significantly more ICSI-derived embryos arrested at the 5- to 8-cell stage (P = 0.024) concomitant with the activation of the paternal genome than those derived from conventional oocyte insemination. Significantly fewer ICSI-derived embryos reached the blastocyst stage on days 5-6 (P<0.001) and significantly fewer ICSI-derived embryos were of high quality (P = 0.002) compared with conventional oocyte insemination. When treatment groups were combined and evaluated by regression analysis, progressive motility and sperm morphology were significantly correlated with diminished blastocyst development and quality (P < 0.05). From these data, we conclude that paternal factors and/or performing ICSI in cases of severe male factor infertility may have a detrimental effect on blastocyst development and their quality.
Sperm must undergo capacitation to become fertilization competent. Here we validated that monosialotetrahexosylganglioside (GM1) localization patterns, which were assessed in the Cap‐Score™ Sperm Function Test, reflect a capacitated state in human sperm. First, we defined patterns representing sperm that do or do not respond to stimuli for capacitation. Sperm with “capacitated” patterns had exposed acrosomal carbohydrates and underwent acrosome exocytosis in response to calcium ionophore (A23187). Precision was evaluated by percent change of the Cap‐Score measured for 50, 100, 150, and 200 sperm. Changes of 11%, 6%, and 5% were observed (n ≥ 23); therefore, we counted ≥150 sperm per condition. Variance within and between readers was evaluated using 20 stitched image files generated from unique ejaculates. Two trained readers randomly resampled each image 20 times, reporting an average standard deviation of 3 Cap‐Score units and coefficient of variation of 13% when rescoring samples, with no difference between readers. Semen liquefaction times ≤2 hr and mechanical liquefaction with Pasteur or wide‐orifice transfer pipettes did not alter Cap‐Score values. However, liquefaction with chymotrypsin (p = 0.002) and bromelain (p = 0.049) reduced response to capacitating stimuli and induced membrane damage, while counterintuitively improving sperm motility. Together, these data validate the Cap‐Score assay for the intended purpose of providing information on sperm capacitation and male fertility. In addition to its clinical utility as a diagnostic tool, this test of sperm function can reveal the impact of common practices of semen handling on the ability of sperm to respond to capacitation stimuli.
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