Click here to close
Hello! We notice that you are using Internet Explorer, which is not supported by Xenbase and may cause the site to display incorrectly.
We suggest using a current version of Chrome,
FireFox, or Safari.
???displayArticle.abstract??? Sperm chemoattraction in invertebrates can be sufficiently robust that one can place a pipette containing the attractive peptide into a sperm suspension and microscopically visualize sperm accumulation around the pipette. Sperm chemoattraction in vertebrates such as frogs, rodents and humans is more difficult to detect and requires quantitative assays. Such assays are of two major types - assays that quantitate sperm movement to a source of chemoattractant, so-called sperm accumulation assays, and assays that actually track the swimming trajectories of individual sperm. Sperm accumulation assays are relatively rapid allowing tens or hundreds of assays to be done in a single day, thereby allowing dose response curves and time courses to be carried out relatively rapidly. These types of assays have been used extensively to characterize many well established chemoattraction systems - for example, neutrophil chemotaxis to bacterial peptides and sperm chemotaxis to follicular fluid. Sperm tracking assays can be more labor intensive but offer additional data on how chemoattractancts actually alter the swimming paths that sperm take. This type of assay is needed to demonstrate the orientation of sperm movement relative to the chemoattrractant gradient axis and to visualize characteristic turns or changes in orientation that bring the sperm closer to the egg. Here we describe methods used for each of these two types of assays. The sperm accumulation assay utilized is called a "two-chamber" assay. Amphibian sperm are placed in a tissue culture plate insert with a polycarbonate filter floor having 12 μm diameter pores. Inserts with sperm are placed into tissue culture plate wells containing buffer and a chemoatttractant carefully pipetted into the bottom well where the floor meets the wall (see Fig. 1). After incubation, the top insert containing the sperm reservoir is carefully removed, and sperm in the bottom chamber that have passed through the membrane are removed, pelleted and then counted by hemocytometer or flow cytometer. The sperm tracking assay utilizes a Zigmond chamber originally developed for observing neutrophil chemotaxis and modified for observation of sperm by Giojalas and coworkers. The chamber consists of a thick glass slide into which two vertical troughs have been machined. These are separated by a 1 mm wide observation platform. After application of a cover glass, sperm are loaded into one trough, the chemoattractant agent into the other and movement of individual sperm visualized by video microscopy. Video footage is then analyzed using software to identify two-dimensional cell movements in the x-y plane as a function of time (xyt data sets) that form the trajectory of each sperm.
Abaigar,
Trajectory variance and autocorrelations within single-sperm tracks as population-level descriptors of sperm track complexity, predictability, and energy-generating ability.
2012, Pubmed
Abaigar,
Trajectory variance and autocorrelations within single-sperm tracks as population-level descriptors of sperm track complexity, predictability, and energy-generating ability.
2012,
Pubmed
al-Anzi,
A sperm chemoattractant is released from Xenopus egg jelly during spawning.
1998,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Blengini,
Human sperm pattern of movement during chemotactic re-orientation towards a progesterone source.
2011,
Pubmed
Böhmer,
Ca2+ spikes in the flagellum control chemotactic behavior of sperm.
2005,
Pubmed
BOYDEN,
The chemotactic effect of mixtures of antibody and antigen on polymorphonuclear leucocytes.
1962,
Pubmed
Burnett,
Egg jelly proteins stimulate directed motility in Xenopus laevis sperm.
2011,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Corkidi,
Tracking sperm in three-dimensions.
2008,
Pubmed
Eisenbach,
Sperm chemotaxis.
1999,
Pubmed
Fabro,
Chemotaxis of capacitated rabbit spermatozoa to follicular fluid revealed by a novel directionality-based assay.
2002,
Pubmed
Gakamsky,
Analysis of chemotaxis when the fraction of responsive cells is small--application to mammalian sperm guidance.
2008,
Pubmed
Guerrero,
Strategies for locating the female gamete: the importance of measuring sperm trajectories in three spatial dimensions.
2011,
Pubmed
Guidobaldi,
Progesterone from the cumulus cells is the sperm chemoattractant secreted by the rabbit oocyte cumulus complex.
2008,
Pubmed
Himes,
Sperm chemotaxis as revealed with live and synthetic eggs.
2011,
Pubmed
Lishko,
Progesterone activates the principal Ca2+ channel of human sperm.
2011,
Pubmed
Mortimer,
Fractal analysis of capacitating human spermatozoa.
1996,
Pubmed
Oliveira,
Increased velocity and induction of chemotactic response in mouse spermatozoa by follicular and oviductal fluids.
1999,
Pubmed
Olson,
Allurin, a 21-kDa sperm chemoattractant from Xenopus egg jelly, is related to mammalian sperm-binding proteins.
2001,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Oren-Benaroya,
The sperm chemoattractant secreted from human cumulus cells is progesterone.
2008,
Pubmed
Ralt,
Sperm attraction to a follicular factor(s) correlates with human egg fertilizability.
1991,
Pubmed
Riffell,
Sex and flow: the consequences of fluid shear for sperm-egg interactions.
2007,
Pubmed
Shiba,
Ca2+ bursts occur around a local minimal concentration of attractant and trigger sperm chemotactic response.
2008,
Pubmed
Spehr,
Odorant receptors and olfactory-like signaling mechanisms in mammalian sperm.
2006,
Pubmed
Strünker,
The CatSper channel mediates progesterone-induced Ca2+ influx in human sperm.
2011,
Pubmed
Sugiyama,
Purification and multimer formation of allurin, a sperm chemoattractant from Xenopus laevis egg jelly.
2009,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Sun,
Lack of species-specificity in mammalian sperm chemotaxis.
2003,
Pubmed
Teves,
Molecular mechanism for human sperm chemotaxis mediated by progesterone.
2009,
Pubmed
Tholl,
Swimming of Xenopus laevis sperm exhibits multiple gears and its duration is extended by egg jelly constituents.
2011,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Veitinger,
Chemosensory Ca2+ dynamics correlate with diverse behavioral phenotypes in human sperm.
2011,
Pubmed
Villanueva-Diaz,
Evidence that human follicular fluid contains a chemoattractant for spermatozoa.
1990,
Pubmed
Villanueva-Díaz,
Progesterone induces human sperm chemotaxis.
1995,
Pubmed
Ward,
Chemotaxis of Arbacia punctulata spermatozoa to resact, a peptide from the egg jelly layer.
1985,
Pubmed
Yoshida,
Sperm chemotaxis and regulation of flagellar movement by Ca2+.
2011,
Pubmed
Zigmond,
Assays of leukocyte chemotaxis.
1986,
Pubmed