The activation of motility in quiescent hamster sperm from the epididymis by calcium and cyclic nucleotides

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Abstract

Control is exerted on the movement of mammalian spermatozoa at ejaculation and at capacitation. Here the activation of motility in motionless pre-ejaculated sperm was investigated. This was done by isolating quiescent caudal epididymal sperm from the hamster and observing that the addition of either calcium cAMP, cGMP, or cUMP conferred full motility upon them. Other salts, nucleotides, caffeine, sugars, or oxygen did not. Epididymal fluid which contains phosphodiesterase had too little calcium to activate the sperm while seminal plasma had more than enough. The cAMP content of quiescent sperm was low, but ATP levels were high. At the activation of motility, sperm cAMP synthesis became very rapid. It thus appears that sperm are quiescent on the male because they lack cAMP, and that calcium, supplied at ejaculation, initiates rapid cAMP synthesis to produce motility. © 1974.

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Morton, B., Harrigan-Lum, J., Albagli, L., & Jooss, T. (1974). The activation of motility in quiescent hamster sperm from the epididymis by calcium and cyclic nucleotides. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 56(2), 372–379. https://doi.org/10.1016/0006-291X(74)90852-3

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