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      Rheotaxis facilitates upstream navigation of mammalian sperm cells.

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          Abstract

          A major puzzle in biology is how mammalian sperm maintain the correct swimming direction during various phases of the sexual reproduction process. Whilst chemotaxis may dominate near the ovum, it is unclear which cues guide spermatozoa on their long journey towards the egg. Hypothesized mechanisms range from peristaltic pumping to temperature sensing and response to fluid flow variations (rheotaxis), but little is known quantitatively about them. We report the first quantitative study of mammalian sperm rheotaxis, using microfluidic devices to investigate systematically swimming of human and bull sperm over a range of physiologically relevant shear rates and viscosities. Our measurements show that the interplay of fluid shear, steric surface-interactions, and chirality of the flagellar beat leads to stable upstream spiralling motion of sperm cells, thus providing a generic and robust rectification mechanism to support mammalian fertilisation. A minimal mathematical model is presented that accounts quantitatively for the experimental observations.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02403.001.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Elife
          eLife
          2050-084X
          2050-084X
          May 27 2014
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
          [2 ] Science, Bourn Hall Clinic, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
          [3 ] Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom R.E.Goldstein@damtp.cam.ac.uk.
          Article
          10.7554/eLife.02403
          4031982
          24867640
          04c1cfbb-570a-45c7-a6e1-787216045080
          Copyright © 2014, Kantsler et al.
          History

          fertilization,rheotaxis,sperm
          fertilization, rheotaxis, sperm

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