Equatorial Segment Protein Defines a Discrete Acrosomal Subcompartment Persisting Throughout Acrosomal Biogenesis
The equatorial segment of the acrosome underlies the domain of the sperm that fuses with the egg membrane during fertilization. Equatorial segment protein (ESP), a novel 349-amino acid concanavalin-A-binding protein encoded by a two-exon gene ( SP-ESP ) located on chromosome 15 at q22, has been loca...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biology of reproduction 2003-09, Vol.69 (3), p.735-745 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The equatorial segment of the acrosome underlies the domain of the sperm that fuses with the egg membrane during fertilization.
Equatorial segment protein (ESP), a novel 349-amino acid concanavalin-A-binding protein encoded by a two-exon gene ( SP-ESP ) located on chromosome 15 at q22, has been localized to the equatorial segment of ejaculated human sperm. Light microscopic
immunofluorescent observations revealed that during acrosome biogenesis ESP first appears in the nascent acrosomal vesicle
in early round spermatids and subsequently segregates to the periphery of the expanding acrosomal vesicle, thereby defining
a peripheral equatorial segment compartment within flattened acrosomal vesicles and in the acrosomes of early and late cap
phase, elongating, and mature spermatids. Electron microscopic examination revealed that ESP segregates to an electron-lucent
subdomain of the condensing acrosomal matrix in Golgi phase round spermatids and persists in a similar electron-lucent subdomain
within cap phase spermatids. Subsequently, ESP was localized to electron-dense regions of the equatorial segment and the expanded
equatorial bulb in elongating spermatids and mature sperm. ESP is the earliest known protein to be recognized as a marker
for the specification of the equatorial segment, and it allows this region to be traced through all phases of acrosomal biogenesis.
Based on these observations, we propose a new model of acrosome biogenesis in which the equatorial segment is defined as a
discrete domain within the acrosomal vesicle as early as the Golgi phase of acrosome biogenesis. |
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ISSN: | 0006-3363 1529-7268 |
DOI: | 10.1095/biolreprod.103.016675 |