Molecular mechanism for human sperm chemotaxis mediated by progesterone

PloS one, 4(12), e8211

DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0008211 PMID 19997608 Source

Abstract

Sperm chemotaxis is a chemical guiding mechanism that may orient spermatozoa to the egg surface. A picomolar concentration gradient of Progesterone (P), the main steroidal component secreted by the cumulus cells that surround the egg, attracts human spermatozoa. In order to elucidate the molecular mechanism of sperm chemotaxis mediated by P, we combine the application of different strategies: pharmacological inhibition of signaling molecules, measurements of the concentrations of second messengers and activation of the chemotactic signaling. Our data implicate a number of classic signal transduction pathways in the response and provide a model for the sequence of events, where the tmAC-cAMP-PKA pathway is activated first, followed by protein tyrosine phosphorylation (equatorial band and flagellum) and calcium mobilization (through IP(3)R and SOC channels), whereas the sGC-cGMP-PKG cascade, is activated later. These events lead to sperm orientation towards the source of the chemoattractant. The finding proposes a molecular mechanism which contributes to the understanding of the signal transduction pathway that takes place in a physiological process as chemotaxis.

Topics

sperm chemotaxis mechanism, progesterone gradient sperm guidance, how sperm find egg, cumulus cell progesterone secretion, sperm signaling pathways conception, calcium mobilization sperm, cAMP PKA pathway sperm chemotaxis, sperm orientation toward egg, picomolar progesterone sperm attraction, protein tyrosine phosphorylation sperm, molecular basis sperm egg interaction

Cite this article

Teves, M. E., Guidobaldi, H. A., Uñates, D. R., Sanchez, R., Miska, W., Publicover, S. J., Morales Garcia, A. A., & Giojalas, L. C. (2009). Molecular mechanism for human sperm chemotaxis mediated by progesterone. *PloS one*, *4*(12), e8211. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008211

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