- Regulation of human sperm motility and hyperactivation components by calcium, calmodulin, and protein phosphatases.
Regulation of human sperm motility and hyperactivation components by calcium, calmodulin, and protein phosphatases.
The role of Ca2+, calmodulin, and protein phosphatases on motility and hyperactivation of noncapacitated, capacitating, and detergent-permeabilized reactivated human sperm was examined. In noncapacitated sperm, W7 inhibited percent motility (%MOT), curvilinear velocity (VCL), amplitude of lateral head displacement (ALH), and percent hyperactivation (%HYP) in an extracellular Ca2+ concentration-dependent manner (p < .05). However, in capacitating sperm, inhibition of motility by W7 was independent of external Ca2+. Treatment of reactivated sperm with a synthetic calmodulin inhibitor peptide decreased VCL and ALH in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner (p < .05). Ca2+ exhibited a dramatic influence on motility within a narrow concentration range (0.7 to 1.0 microM) in reactivated sperm. A calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase (PP2B) was identified by activity assay, immunoblotting, and dephosphorylation of endogenous phosphoproteins. The sperm enzyme, unlike bovine brain PP2B, was inhibited by 1 microM okadaic acid (OA) in the presence of Mn2+, suggesting that the sperm enzyme is unique. In reactivated sperm, inhibition of endogenous PP2B-like activity with anti-PP2B antibodies altered ALH, whereas OA altered both VCL and ALH and also inhibited a subset of Ca(2+)-dependent dephosphorylations of cAMP-dependent phosphoproteins in capacitating sperm. These results suggest (1) an important role for calmodulin and PP2B in Ca(2+)-regulated motility parameters, particularly ALH, and (2) that modulation of human sperm motility, including hyperactivation by cAMP-dependent phosphorylation, requires calmodulin-dependent as well as other protein dephosphorylations.