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      FPP modulates mammalian sperm function via TCP-11 and the adenylyl cyclase/cAMP pathway.

      1 , , ,
      Molecular reproduction and development
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Fertilization promoting peptide (FPP; pGlu-Glu-ProNH2), which is found in seminal plasma, promotes capacitation but inhibits spontaneous acrosome loss in mammalian spermatozoa in vitro. Adenosine, known to modulate the adenylyl cyclase (AC)/cAMP pathway, elicits these same responses whereas FPP + adenosine produces an enhanced response, leading to the hypothesis that FPP and adenosine modulate the same signal transduction pathway but act via different receptors. TCP-11, the product of a t-complex gene, is the putative receptor for FPP: Fab fragments of anti-TCP-11 antibodies have the same effect as FPP on mouse spermatozoa and Gln-FPP, a competitive inhibitor of FPP, also competitively inhibits responses to the Fab fragments. In the present study, specific binding of 3H-FPP to sperm membranes was significantly inhibited by 200 nM Gln-FPP and anti-TCP-11 Fab fragments (1/25 dilution), thus confirming that FPP, Gln-FPP, and Fab fragments compete for the same binding site. In addition, spermatozoa treated with A23187 to induce the acrosome reaction bound significantly less 3H-FPP than untreated cells, suggesting that a large proportion of the FPP binding sites are associated with the acrosomal cap region; TCP-11 is located in this region. In other experiments, 100 nM FPP significantly stimulated cAMP production in mouse sperm membranes, permeabilized cells and intact cells. Furthermore, Gln-FPP inhibited production of cAMP in response to FPP but not to adenosine (10 microM) or its analogue NECA (100 nM), supporting the involvement of two different receptors. Finally, anti-TCP-11 Fab fragments (1/25 dilution) significantly stimulated cAMP production, whereas low Fab (1/200; nonstimulatory when used alone) plus adenosine (10 microM) significantly enhanced the stimulation of capacitation by adenosine. These results support the hypotheses that TCP-11 is the receptor for FPP and that FPP<-->TCP-11 interactions modulate AC/cAMP.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Mol Reprod Dev
          Molecular reproduction and development
          Wiley
          1040-452X
          1040-452X
          Dec 1998
          : 51
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Anatomy and Human Biology, King's College London, Strand, United Kingdom.
          Article
          10.1002/(SICI)1098-2795(199812)51:4<468::AID-MRD14>3.0.CO;2-6
          10.1002/(SICI)1098-2795(199812)51:4<468::AID-MRD14>3.0.CO;2-6
          9820206
          bbc08032-9099-4f9d-929d-bb6f102c79e5
          History

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