Effect of seminal plasma on capacitation and hyperactivation in human spermatozoa.

ST Mortimer, MA Swan… - Human reproduction …, 1998 - academic.oup.com
ST Mortimer, MA Swan, D Mortimer
Human reproduction (Oxford, England), 1998academic.oup.com
While hyperactivated motility is known to be a concomitant of capacitation, and a
prerequisite for fertilization, the specific interdependence of capacitation and hyperactivation
in human spermatozoa has not been investigated. This study was designed to determine the
effect of seminal plasma contamination on the expression of hyperactivated motility and the
relationship between hyperactivation and capacitation, since seminal plasma contains
decapacitation factor (s). Seminal plasma was obtained by centrifugation of aliquots of …
Abstract
While hyperactivated motility is known to be a concomitant of capacitation, and a prerequisite for fertilization, the specific interdependence of capacitation and hyperactivation in human spermatozoa has not been investigated. This study was designed to determine the effect of seminal plasma contamination on the expression of hyperactivated motility and the relationship between hyperactivation and capacitation, since seminal plasma contains decapacitation factor(s). Seminal plasma was obtained by centrifugation of aliquots of liquefied semen layered over 1.5 ml 40.5% Percoll and mixed with human tubal fluid (HTF) medium containing 30 mg/ml human serum albumin (HSA) (HTF) to a final concentration of 5% (v/v) seminal plasma (SP). Motile spermatozoa were isolated from the remainder of the semen by swim-up into either HTF or SP medium. Samples were taken from each treatment immediately post-harvest (0 h) and after 60 min at 37 degrees C (1 h) for hyperactivation and capacitation assessment. The treatments were then divided into two portions, centrifuged and resuspended in either HTF or SP, giving HTF control and SP control treatments and two crossover treatments, 1 h HTF then 1 h SP (H/SP) and 1 h SP then 1 h HTF (SP/H). All tubes were incubated for a further 60 min at 37 degrees C before aliquots were taken for hyperactivation and capacitation assessments. Hyperactivation was estimated using an IVOS v10.6t (Hamilton Thorne Research, Beverly, MA, USA) 60 Hz CASA instrument, and capacitation was estimated using the chlortetracycline (CTC) method. The presence of seminal plasma in the capacitation medium for 60-120 min post-swim-up inhibited the development of hyperactivated motility. This inhibition was reversible, and was not prevented by preincubation for 1 h in HTF medium. There was no difference in the CTC binding patterns between treatments at 2 h, indicating that the capacitation-associated membrane changes were not affected by the presence of a low concentration of seminal plasma. There was no correlation between percentage capacitated and percentage hyperactivated spermatozoa for any treatment. Since the proportions of hyperactivated spermatozoa and capacitated spermatozoa were not related, we conclude that the processes leading to hyperactivation and to the membrane changes associated with capacitation are not tightly interlinked and consider this finding to be due to hyperactivated motility being associated with flagellar movement, while the CTC assay assesses changes in the Ca2+ levels of the sperm head plasma membrane.
Oxford University Press