4.6 Article

Acetylcholine causes an increase of intracellular calcium in human sperm

Journal

MOLECULAR HUMAN REPRODUCTION
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages 881-889

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molehr/gah245

Keywords

calcium; nicotinic acetylcholine receptors; sperm

Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [HD33368] Funding Source: Medline

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Sperm nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) can influence motility and the initiation of acrosome reaction (AR). We report that AR initiation by acetylcholine (ACh) in capacitated human sperm requires both Na+ and Ca2+ in the external medium. Pre-incubation with 50 mu M 3-quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB) or 50 nM strychnine failed to inhibit the ACh-initiated AR, demonstrating that muscarinic AChRs and nAChRs containing alpha 9 subunits do not mediate this event. Choline (2.5, 5 and 10 mM), a highly specific but low potency agonist of the alpha 7 nAChR initiated AR, with its effect blocked by the nAChR antagonist methyllycaconitine (MLA). ACh (50-400 mu M) stimulated a small transient rise in the intracellular Ca2+ in sperm populations loaded with FURA-2, with 200 mu M ACh being maximal (146 nM +/- 23 SEM). The nAChR antagonists, alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BTX) and MLA, reduced the ACh-initiated Ca2+ rise by 75 and 78%, respectively, demonstrating the majority of the rise is mediated through nAChRs containing alpha 7 or alpha 9 subunits. Single cell imaging studies using FLUO-3 resolved two patterns of ACh-stimulated Ca2+ increase in the sperm head: 94% of responding sperm displayed a rise (59.6% +/- 5.7 SEM increase from resting fluorescence intensity), returning to resting levels over a period of 2-3 min. The remaining sperm (6%) displayed a sharp spike of Ca2+ (similar to 1 min; 86% +/- 4.3 SEM change in fluorescence intensity), followed by abrupt loss of fluorescence, a pattern suggestive of AR. A Ca2+ influx in the sperm midpiece appeared to accompany the Ca2+ influx seen in the head. These observations confirm an ionotropic role for nAChRs in sperm function.

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