4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Human zona pellucida glycoproteins: functional relevance during fertilization

Journal

JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 83, Issue 1-2, Pages 50-55

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jri.2009.07.008

Keywords

Zona pellucida glycoproteins; Spermatozoa; Acrosome reaction

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The zona pellucida (ZP), a glycoproteinaceous matrix surrounding the mammalian oocyte plays an important role in species-specific sperm-egg binding, induction of acrosome reaction in the ZP-bound spermatozoa, avoidance of polyspermy and protection of the embryo prior to implantation. In contrast to mouse, human ZP matrix is composed of 4 glycoproteins designated as ZP1, ZP2, ZP3 and ZP4 (Zp4 pseudogene in mouse). Recent studies employing recombinant and immunoaffinity purified human zona proteins revealed that in addition to ZP3, capacitated acrosome-intact spermatozoa also bind ZP4. Human ZP2 primarily binds to the acrosome-reacted spermatozoa, supporting its role as secondary sperm receptor, as delineated in the murine model. For binding of human zona proteins to spermatozoa, glycosylation is not critical. Both human ZP3 and ZP4 induce close-dependant acrosomal exocytosis in capacitated sperm. In contrast to the murine model, Winked glycosylation is more critical for the human ZP3/ZP4 mediated induction of acrosomal exocytosis. Subtle differences in the downstream signaling events associated with ZP3 vs. ZP4 mediated induction of acrosomal exocytosis have been observed. To conclude, in humans, ZP3 and ZP4 are involved in binding of the spermatozoa to the egg and subsequent induction of acrosome reaction. The contribution, if any, of human ZP glycoprotein-1 (ZP1) during these stages of fertilization remains to be elucidated. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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