Temporal sampling, resetting, and adaptation orchestrate gradient sensing in sperm

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Abstract

Sperm, navigating in a chemical gradient, are exposed to a periodic stream of chemoattractant molecules. The periodic stimulation entrains Ca2+ oscillations that control looping steering responses. It is not known how sperm sample chemoattractant molecules during periodic stimulation and adjust their sensitivity. We report that sea urchin sperm sampled molecules for 0.2-0.6 s before a Ca2+ response was produced. Additional molecules delivered during a Ca2+ response reset the cell by causing a pronounced Ca2+ drop that terminated the response; this reset was followed by a new Ca2+ rise. After stimulation, sperm adapted their sensitivity following the Weber-Fechner law. Taking into account the single-molecule sensitivity, we estimate that sperm can register a minimal gradient of 0.8fM/μm and be attracted from as far away as 4.7mm. Many microorganisms sense stimulus gradients along periodic paths to translate a spatial distribution of the stimulus into a temporal pattern of the cell response. Orchestration of temporal sampling, resetting, and adaptation might control gradient sensing in such organisms as well. © 2012 Kashikar et al.

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Kashikar, N. D., Alvarez, L., Seifert, R., Gregor, I., Jäckle, O., Beyermann, M., … Benjamin Kaupp, U. (2012). Temporal sampling, resetting, and adaptation orchestrate gradient sensing in sperm. Journal of Cell Biology, 198(6), 1075–1091. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201204024

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