Explorer

Molecule identified that helps sperm find egg cells

Washington DC, [USA] Aug 05 (ANI): In a recent discovery, scientists have identified a key molecule that drives chemo attraction between sperm and egg cells in marine invertebrates, animals that don't have a vertebral column.

More than 100 years ago, MBL Director F.R. Lillie of the University of Chicago discovered that eggs from marine invertebrates release a chemical factor that attracts sperm by a process called chemotaxis.

Sperm swims up a chemical gradient to reach the egg, assisted by a pulsatile rise in calcium ion concentration in the sperm tail that controls its beating.

In past years, many of the cellular components that translate chemo-attractant stimulation into a calcium response have been revealed, but a crucial ingredient has been missing. A prerequisite for calcium ions from the sperm's environment being able to enter the tail is that the sperm cell's pH becomes more alkaline. The molecule that brings about this change in pH has been hard to pin down.

In this new report, U. Benjamin Kaupp, a MBL Whitman Center Scientist from the Center of Advanced European Studies (Caesar) in Bonn, Germany, identifies this molecule.

The molecule that Kaupp and colleagues identified allows sodium ions to flow into the sperm cell and, in exchange, transports protons out of the cell. Such so-called sodium/proton exchangers have been known for a long time, but this one is special. It is a Chimaera that shares structural features with ion channels, called pacemaker channels, which control our heartbeat and electrical activity in the brain.

This sodium/proton exchange in the sperm cell is activated by a stretch of positively charged amino acids called the voltage sensor. When sperm capture chemo-attractant molecules, the voltage becomes more negative, because potassium channels open and potassium ions leave the cell.

The voltage-sensor registers this voltage change and the exchanger begins exporting protons from the cell, the cell's interior becomes more alkaline. When this mechanism is disabled, the calcium pulses in the sperm tail are suppressed, and sperm are lost on their voyage to the egg.

The study appears in the Nature Communications journal. (ANI)


This story has not been edited. It has been published as provided by ANI

View More
Advertisement
Advertisement
25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Advertisement

Top Headlines

Cops Use Water Canon To Disperse BJP Workers Protesting Kejriwal's 'Purvanchal Voters' Remark
Cops Use Water Canon To Disperse BJP Workers Protesting Kejriwal's 'Purvanchal Voters' Remark
Chhota Rajan, Gangster Convicted Of Murder & Extortion, Admitted To Delhi AIIMS
Underworld Don Chhota Rajan Admitted To Delhi AIIMS
Supreme Court Warns Public About Fake Mimic Websites Following Phishing Attacks On IAS Officers
Supreme Court Warns Public About Fake Mimic Websites Following Phishing Attacks On IAS Officers
Class-12 Student Confesses To Sending Bomb Threats To Delhi Schools
Who Sent Bomb Threats To Delhi Schools? Police Reveal
Advertisement
ABP Premium

Videos

Delhi Elections 2025: BJP Workers Protest Against AAP, March Led by Manoj Tiwari to Kejriwal's ResidenceDelhi Elections 2025: BJP March Against Kejriwal, Manoj Tiwari Leads Purvanchal Samman MarchDelhi Elections 2025: BJP’s Core Group Meeting Continues, Second Candidate List Likely SoonDelhi Elections 2025: AAP Launches Major Attack on BJP Over Alleged Bribery for Votes
Embed widget