Title of article :
Fowl (Gallus domesticus) Sperm Motility Depends Upon Mitochondrial Calcium Cycling Driven by Extracellular Sodium
Author/Authors :
Feltmann، DP Froman and AJ نويسنده , , Froman، D.P. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
-96
From page :
97
To page :
0
Abstract :
A relationship between extracellular Ca^+2, fowl sperm phospholipase A2 activity, long-chain acylcarnitine content, and motility was demonstrated in previous work. Sperm motility appeared to depend upon Na+dependent Ca^+2 cycling when sperm were incubated at body temperature without glucose. In the present work, motility decreased as a function of time when sperm were incubated in 2 mM Ca^+2 prepared with either buffered isotonic sucrose or LiCl. However, this effect was less pronounced in the case of LiCl. The sparing effect of Li+ was attributed to the mitochondrial Na+/Ca^+2 exchanger. Motile concentration decreased exponentially in response to micromolar concentrations of CGP 37157, a specific inhibitor of the mitochondrial Na+/Ca^+2 exchanger. KB-R7943 mesylate, an inhibitor of the reverse mode of the Na+/Ca^+2 exchanger, prevented re-initiation of motility when exogenous Ca^+2 was added to sperm rendered immotile by incubation with 1,2-bis-(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,Nʹ,Nʹ-tetraacetic acid, a high-affinity Ca^+2 chelator. The presence of voltage-gated Ca^+2 channels was confirmed by the effect of nifedipine on motile concentration. Neither motile concentration nor straight line velocity was affected by either ouabain or orthovanadate, which inhibit Na+-K+ ATPase and Ca^+2-ATPase, respectively. In summary, we infer that 1) fowl sperm motility is dependent upon extracellular Ca^+2 cycling through mitochondria; 2) such cycling is dependent upon extracellular Na+; and 3) fowl sperm conserve ATP by moving neither Na+ nor Ca^+2 by active transport. Understanding the relationship between mitochondrial Ca^+2 cycling and ATP production may be applicable to long-term semen storage.
Keywords :
structure from motion , motion segmentation , dynamic scene reconstruction , computer vision
Journal title :
Biology of Reproduction
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Biology of Reproduction
Record number :
88544
Link To Document :
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