Rat outer dense fibres were isolated from cauda epididymal spermatozoa using mechanical and chemical dissection methods. Sperm tail isolation procedures were monitored by phase-contrast microscopy and the purity of the outer dense fibres was verified by electron microscopy. SDS-PAGE of isolated outer dense fibres revealed at least nine Coomassie brilliant blue stained bands, and 12 silver staining bands. The most abundant proteins were a large band between 26.5 and 32.5 kDa, and 84 kDa, 21.5 kDa and 15.5 kDa bands. The amino acid composition of the total rat outer dense fibres and seven isolated proteins showed similar compositions, being abundant in aspartic and glutamic acid, serine, glycine and leucine. However, the content of cysteine and proline was highly variable among the isolated proteins. Immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrated that a polyclonal antiserum to isolated rat outer dense fibres showed positive staining localized to the mid-piece of rat and rabbit spermatozoa. However, there was crossreactivity in the principal piece as well as the mid-piece of the human spermatozoa. The antiserum also showed crossreactivity in the perforatorium of rat sperm heads and the acrosome and equatorial segment of rabbit sperm heads. These data indicate that it is technically possible to isolate proteins from the outer dense fibres that will enable further studies of the amino acid sequences of sperm tail proteins.
Using mechanical and chemical dissection methods, fibrous sheath was isolated both from normal ejaculated human spermatozoa and from rabbit cauda epididymal spermatozoa. The same techniques did not produce a pure preparation of fibrous sheath from ejaculated rabbit spermatozoa, suggesting that further cross-linking and stabilization of sperm structures occurs in response to components of the seminal plasma. The isolation procedures were monitored by phase contrast microscopy and the purity of the fibrous sheath was verified by electron microscopy. Sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of isolated human fibrous sheath revealed at least 14 protein bands of which the most intensely stained were of molecular weight 84, 72, 66.2, 57, 32 and 28.5 kDa. The rabbit fibrous sheath revealed at least 10 protein bands, of which the most intensely stained were 35.2, 32.7 and 28.5 kDa. The amino acid composition of the purified fibrous sheath from human and rabbit spermatozoa was similar, being high in aspartic acid and/or asparagine and glutamic acid and/or glutamine, serine, alanine, leucine, lysine and glycine, but low in histidine, tyrosine and isoleucine. This composition is similar to that reported for the rat and suggests that mammalian sperm tail fibrous sheaths are composed of similar types of proteins, although there are apparent differences in protein components between species.
This paper examines the role of commodity own rates of interest in intertemporal analysis of consumer behaviour and presents a disaggregate analysis of intertemporal substitution in commodity demand and consumption. Commodity rates of interest are defined from the Euler equations implied by the intertemporal consumer choice problem. The relationship between commodity own rates and the real interest rate is derived, and the conditions for equality of commodity own rates are discussed. The intertemporal commodity substitution elasticities are characterised using commodity rates of interest, and the intertemporal substitution elasticity of consumption is derived from its constituent commodity demands. Evidence from estimation of the demand system and the consumption function reveals high intertemporal substitution for consumer goods as well as consumption. Copyright Blackwell Publishing Ltd/University of Adelaide and Flinders University of South Australia 2004.
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