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RESEARCH
Science
Biology
REPRODUCTION
Researchers isolate proteins that allow sperm
to penetrate egg
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
3/1/2001
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A team
of proteins vital to fertility because of their ability to send signals
that allow sperm to pass through an egg membrane has been isolated by
researchers at two universities.
The finding, says David J. Miller of the University of Illinois, is
a small step in itself but a leap forward in the study of infertility.
"We've gotten inside the door and past the first step," he
said. "We believe we are looking at a single pathway, but one that
may have alternatives along the way."
Millers group of UI researchers and Barry D. Shur of Emory University
in Atlanta reported in the February issue of the journal Development
that once sperm binds to the protein coat of an egg, a group of G proteins
activate. Their subsequent signaling activity opens the gate for sperm
to enter.
Shur had reported in 1996 that the protein galactosyl transferase (GalTase)
on sperm binds to the protein ZP3 on the zona pellucida -- a coat around
all mammalian eggs. However, his findings were contradictory: When GalTase
was absent, fertility did not stop in mice, but during in-vitro fertilization
experiments, a lack of GalTase severely compromised sperms' ability
to penetrate the zona pellucida.
The new research strengthens and advances Shur's earlier discovery,
said Miller, a UI professor of animal science who did postdoctoral research
under Shur. This time, researchers focused on ZP3 with a series of molecular
experiments that combined components of sperm from mice and egg cells
from frogs.
They found that when ZP3 and a "long form" of GalTase lock
tightly together, the G proteins, which are present in sperm and eggs,
react to release the enzyme vesicles necessary for sperm penetration.
Short-form GalTase that contains fewer amino acids does not activate
the G proteins when linked with ZP3, researchers found.
When they genetically altered an amino acid in the
long-form GalTase, G-protein activation stopped and so did the release
of vesicles. An additional experiment also showed the necessity of the
G proteins; the addition of pertussis toxin, which inactivates them,
also blocked the release of the vesicles.
"We now have a better molecular understanding of how sperm binds
and gets through the coat around an egg," Miller said. "We
know that G proteins are involved in the signaling process, but there
may be another mediating step between GalTase and ZP3 that we dont
know about."
Miller's lab is now trying to determine if other receptors on sperm
are important. "As more of the questions are answered, well
be able to determine if it's the man or woman who needs to be treated
for infertility," he said. "The knowledge also could lead
to better contraceptives, new methods to inhibit pest populations and
ways to promote reproduction in farm animals and endangered species."
The National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health and the
Illinois Agricultural Experiment Station funded the research. Co-authors
with Miller and Shur were Miller's graduate students Xudong Shi, Simin
Amindari, Kavitha Paruchuru, Dale Skalla and Heather Burkin.
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