4.4 Article

Overtime expression of plasma membrane and mitochondrial function markers associated with cell death in human spermatozoa exposed to nonphysiological levels of reactive oxygen species

Journal

ANDROLOGIA
Volume 53, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/and.13907

Keywords

cell death; cell membrane integrity; cell membrane permeability; mitochondrial membrane potential; reactive oxygen species

Categories

Funding

  1. Agencia Nacional de Investigacion y Desarrollo ANID-PCHA/Doctorado Nacional [21160071]
  2. Direccion de Investigacion, Universidad de La Frontera [DI19-0120]

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Mitochondria in human spermatozoa are rapidly affected by reactive oxygen species, leading to decreased mitochondrial membrane potential and increased phosphatidylserine externalisation. The study also found increased membrane permeability after 45 minutes and loss of cell membrane integrity at 60 minutes, indicating a progression of cell death mechanisms triggered by H2O2 stimulation.
In many cell types, the potential of reactive oxygen species to induce death processes has been largely demonstrated. Studies in spermatozoa have associated the imbalance of reactive oxygen species and phosphatidylserine externalisation as an apoptosis marker. However, the lack of consensus about time effect in the joint expression of these and other death markers has made it difficult to understand the set of mechanisms influenced beyond the concentration effect of reactive oxygen species to stimulate cell death. Here, the plasma membrane permeability and integrity, phosphatidylserine externalisation and mitochondrial membrane potential were jointly evaluated as death markers in human spermatozoa stimulated with H2O2. The results showed a profound and sustained effect of dissipation in the mitochondrial membrane potential and an increased phosphatidylserine externalisation in human spermatozoa exposed to 3 mmol(-1) of H2O2 at 30 min. This was followed by an increased membrane permeability after 45 min. The last observed event was the loss of cell membrane integrity at 60 min. In conclusion, mitochondria are rapidly affected in human spermatozoa exposed to reactive oxygen species, with the barely detectable mitochondrial membrane potential coexisting with the high phosphatidylserine externalisation in cells with normal membrane permeability.

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