BACKGROUNDThere has been an ongoing debate in the reproductive field about whether mammalian spermatozoa rely on glycolysis, oxidative phosphorylation or both for their energy production. Recent studies have proposed that human spermatozoa depend mainly on glucose for motility and fertilization but the mechanism behind an efficient glycolysis in human spermatozoa is not well understood. Here, we demonstrate how human spermatozoa utilize exogenous pyruvate to enhance glycolytic ATP production, motility, hyperactivation and capacitation, events that are crucial for male fertility.METHODSPurified human spermatozoa from healthy donors were incubated under capacitating conditions (including albumin, bicarbonate and glucose) and tested for changes in ATP levels, motility, hyperactivation and tyrosine phosphorylation after treatment with pyruvate. The experiments were repeated in the presence of sodium cyanide in order to assess the contribution from mitochondrial respiration. The metabolism of 13C labeled glucose and pyruvate was traced by a combination of liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry.RESULTSThe treatment of human spermatozoa with exogenous pyruvate increased intracellular ATP levels, progressive motility and hyperactivation by 56, 21 and 130%, respectively. In addition, added pyruvate induced a significant increase in tyrosine phosphorylation levels. Blocking of the electron transport chain did not markedly affect the results, indicating that the mechanism is independent of oxidative phosphorylation. However, the observed effects could be counteracted by oxamate, an inhibitor of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Metabolic tracing experiments revealed that the observed rise in ATP concentration resulted from an enhanced glycolytic flux, which was increased by more than 50% in the presence of exogenous pyruvate. Moreover, all consumed 13C labeled pyruvate added was converted to lactate rather than oxidized in the tricarboxylic acid cycle.CONCLUSIONSHuman spermatozoa seem to rely mainly, if not entirely, on glycolysis as the source of ATP fueling the energy-demanding processes of motility and capacitation. The efficient glycolysis is dependent on exogenous pyruvate, which indirectly feeds the accelerated glycolysis with NAD+ through the LDH-mediated conversion of pyruvate to lactate. Pyruvate is present in the human female reproductive tract at concentrations in accordance with our results. As seen in other mammals, the motility and fertility of human spermatozoa seem to be dictated by the available energy substrates present in the conspecific female.
Base excision repair is the major pathway for removal of oxidative DNA base damage. This pathway is initiated by DNA glycosylases, which recognize and excise damaged bases from DNA. In this work, we have purified the glycosylase domain (GD) of human DNA glycosylase NEIL3. The substrate specificity has been characterized and we have elucidated the catalytic mechanisms. GD NEIL3 excised the hydantoin lesions spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp) and guanidinohydantoin (Gh) in single-stranded (ss) and double-stranded (ds) DNA efficiently. NEIL3 also removed 5-hydroxy-2’-deoxycytidine (5OHC) and 5-hydroxy-2’-deoxyuridine (5OHU) in ssDNA, but less efficiently than hydantoins. Unlike NEIL1 and NEIL2, which possess a β,δ-elimination activity, NEIL3 mainly incised damaged DNA by β-elimination. Further, the base excision and strand incision activities of NEIL3 exhibited a non-concerted action, indicating that NEIL3 mainly operate as a monofunctional DNA glycosylase. The site-specific NEIL3 mutant V2P, however, showed a concerted action, suggesting that the N-terminal amino group in Val2 is critical for the monofunctional modus. Finally, we demonstrated that residue Lys81 is essential for catalysis.
Inhibition of family 18 chitinases is emerging as a target for pest and fungal control as well as asthma and inflammatory therapy. One of the best known inhibitors for these enzymes is allosamidin, a natural product. While interactions of this compound with family 18 chitinases have been studied in much detail by X-ray crystallography and standard enzymology, details of the driving forces behind its tight binding remain unknown. We have studied the thermodynamics of allosamidin binding to chitinase B (ChiB), a family 18 chitinase from Serratia marcescens, using isothermal titration calorimetry. At pH 6.0, Kd is 0.16 +/- 0.04 microM, and the binding reaction is entropically driven (DeltaSr = 44 cal/K mol) with an enthalpic penalty (DeltaHr = 3.8 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol). Dissection of the entropic term shows that a favorable conformational change in the allosamidin-ChiB complex (DeltaSconf = 37 cal/K mol) is the main contributor to the reaction. At pH 8.5, Kd decreases to 0.03 muM and the binding reaction is less entropically favorable (DeltaSr = 30 cal/K mol). While the solvation entropy change (DeltaSsolv) increases from 15 cal/K mol at pH 6.0 to 46 cal/K mol at pH 8.5, DeltaSconf becomes small and negative (-8 cal/K mol) because of an enthalpy-entropy compensation. Analyses of proton transfer showed that at pH 6.0 binding of allosamidin requires deprotonation of the Asp142-Glu144 catalytic diad. At pH 8.5, the 142-144 diad is ionized in the native enzyme, relieving the deprotonation penalty of binding and explaining why binding becomes enthalpically favorable (DeltaHr = -1.2 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol).
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