The selectin family of cell adhesion molecules mediates initial leukocyte adhesion to vascular endothelial cells at sites of inflammation. O-glycan structural similarities between oligosaccharides from human leukocyte P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) and from zona pellucida glycoproteins of porcine oocytes indicate the possible existence of a P-selectin ligand in the zona pellucida. Here, using biochemical as well as morphological approaches, we demonstrate that a P-selectin ligand is expressed in the porcine zona pellucida. In addition, a search for a specific receptor for this ligand leads to the identification of P-selectin on the acrosomal membrane of porcine sperm cells. In vitro binding of porcine acrosome-reacted sperm cells to oocytes was found to be Ca2+ dependent and inhibitable with either P-selectin, P-selectin receptor–globulin, or leukocyte adhesion blocking antibodies against P-selectin and PSGL-1. Moreover, porcine sperm cells were found to be capable of binding to human promyeloid cell line HL-60. Taken together, our findings implicate a potential role for the oocyte P-selectin ligand and the sperm P-selectin in porcine sperm– egg interactions.
The in vivo model which may be the most accurate for the ability to predict hair growth in humans, and which was utilized in the preclinical development of minoxidil, is the adult stumptailed macaque. Previous reports have suggested that the enzyme activity which accounts for the activation of minoxidil, i.e., minoxidil sulfotransferase, is present in skin. We have demonstrated that scalp skin from the stumptailed macaque contains minoxidil sulfotransferase activity, and further with dissection of that scalp skin into epidermis, dermis and hair follicle, most of sulfotransferase activity was present in the follicle. Sulfotransferase activity in the hair follicle in freeze-dried scalp skin sections from 9 stumptailed macaques ranged from 47 to 84% of the total (mean 61 ± 12%). Much less minoxidil sulfotransferase activity was measured in the epidermis (mean 18 ± 11%, with a range of 2–37%) and the dermis (mean 21 ± 8%, with a range of 4–3 5%) of these scalp sections. These results indicate that the scalp skin from the stumptailed macaque contains minoxidil sulfotransferase activity and this activity is largely localized in the hair follicle which may account for its ability to stimulate hair growth in this animal model.
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