- Fluorescent localization of thiols and disulfides in marsupial spermatozoa by bromobimane labelling.
Fluorescent localization of thiols and disulfides in marsupial spermatozoa by bromobimane labelling.
The acrosome of marsupial spermatozoa is a robust structure which, unlike its placental counterpart, resists disruption by detergent or freeze/thawing and does not undergo a calcium ionophore induced acrosome reaction. In this study specific fluorescent thiol labels, bromobimanes, were used to detect reactive thiols in the intact marsupial spermatozoon and examine whether disulfides play a role in the stability of the acrosome. Ejaculated brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) and tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) spermatozoa were washed by swim up and incubated with or without dithiothreitol (DTT) in order to reduce disulfides to reactive thiols. Spermatozoa were then washed by centrifugation and treated with monobromobimane (mBBr), a membrane-permeable bromobimane, or with monobromotrimethylammoniobimane (qBBr), a membrane-impermeable bromobimane. Labelled spermatozoa were examined by fluorescence microscopy and sperm proteins (whole sperm proteins and basic nuclear proteins) were analysed by gel electrophoresis. The membrane-permeable agent mBBr lightly labelled the perimeter of the acrosome of non-DTT-treated possum and wallaby spermatozoa, indicating the presence of peri-acrosomal thiol groups. After reduction of sperm disulfides by DTT, mBBr labelled the entire acrosome of both species. The membrane-impermeable agent qBBr did not label any part of the acrosome in non-DTT or DTT-treated wallaby or possum spermatozoa. Thiols and disulfides are thus associated with the marsupial acrosome. They are not found on the overlying plasma membrane but are either in the acrosomal membranes and/or matrix. The sperm midpiece and tail were labelled by mBBr, with increased fluorescence observed in DTT-treated spermatozoa.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)