Publication | Open Access
Acrosome Reaction and Ca2+ Imaging in Single Human Spermatozoa: New Regulatory Roles of [Ca2+]i1
73
Citations
34
References
2014
Year
SpermatogenesisAcrosome ReactionMolecular BiologySingle Human SpermatozoaSpermatozoa Acrosome ReactionSemen AnalysisReproductive BiologyFertilisationEmbryologyReproductive EndocrinologyReproductive PhysiologyCa2+ ImagingFemale InfertilityMale InfertilityGerm Cell DevelopmentPublic HealthInfertilityGameteHuman SpermatozoaCell BiologyMammalian FertilizationHuman ReproductionSignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyUterine ReceptivityMedicine
The spermatozoa acrosome reaction (AR) is essential for mammalian fertilization. Few methods allow visualization of AR in real time together with Ca²⁺ imaging. Here, we show that FM4-64, a fluorescent dye used to follow exocytosis, reliably reports AR progression induced by ionomycin and progesterone in human spermatozoa. FM4-64 clearly delimits the spermatozoa contour and reports morphological cell changes before, during, and after AR. This strategy unveiled the formation of moving tubular appendages, emerging from acrosome-reacted spermatozoa, which was confirmed by scanning electron microscopy. Alternate wavelength illumination allowed concomitant imaging of FM4-64 and Fluo-4, a Ca²⁺ indicator. These AR and intracellular Ca²⁺ ([Ca²⁺]i) recordings revealed that the presence of [Ca²⁺]i oscillations, both spontaneous and progesterone induced, prevents AR in human spermatozoa. Notably, the progesterone-induced AR is preceded by a second [Ca²⁺]i peak and ~40% of reacting spermatozoa also manifest a slow [Ca²⁺]i rise ~2 min before AR. Our findings uncover new AR features related to [Ca²⁺]i.
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