Mammalian sperm capacitation, defined as an obligatory maturational process leading to the development of the fertilization-competent state, results from a poorly understood series of morphological and molecular events. We report here that ejaculated bovine sperm, incubated under conditions that support capacitation in vitro, display a reproducible pattern of protein tyrosine phosphorylations that are regulated by a cAMP-dependent pathway. The appearance of these tyrosine phosphorylated proteins correlated temporally with the time course of capacitation induced by heparin, and these phosphorylations displayed a similar heparin concentration dependence. Glucose, which inhibits capacitation, inhibited these protein tyrosine phosphorylations in media containing heparin. The biologically active cAMP analogues (dibutyryl cAMP [db-cAMP], 8-bromo cAMP, sp-cAMPS) and the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) induced the same protein tyrosine phosphorylation patterns as seen with heparin. Moreover, these cAMP agonists could overcome the inhibition of the heparin-induced tyrosine phosphorylations by glucose. In contrast, Rp-adenosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphorothioate (Rp-cAMPS), a protein kinase A (PK-A) antagonist, blocked the capacitation-associated increases in protein tyrosine phosphorylation. This cAMP regulation of the protein tyrosine phosphorylation pattern is mediated by PK-A since N-[2-(p-bromocinnamylamino) ethyl]-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide-dihydrochloride (H89), another inhibitor of PK-A, inhibited the heparin-induced protein tyrosine phosphorylation pattern in a concentration-dependent manner in either the absence or presence of db-cAMP, IBMX, and glucose. These data support a model for sperm capacitation that includes protein tyrosine phosphorylation as an important regulatory pathway, and a role for cAMP/PK-A in the regulation of this pathway leading to capacitation. These studies are the first to report a unique interrelationship between tyrosine kinase/phosphatase and cAMP signaling pathways at the level of PK-A in bovine sperm capacitation.
Sperm capacitation in vitro is highly correlated with an increase in protein tyrosine phosphorylation that is regulated by cAMP through a unique mode of signal transduction cross-talk. The activation of this signaling pathway, as well as capacitation, requires bovine serum albumin (BSA) in the incubation medium. BSA is hypothesized to modulate capacitation through its ability to remove cholesterol from the sperm plasma membrane. Here we demonstrate that the cholesterol-binding heptasaccharides, methyl--cyclodextrin and OH-propyl--cyclodextrin, promote the release of cholesterol from the mouse sperm plasma membrane in media devoid of BSA. Both of these -cyclodextrins were also demonstrated to increase protein tyrosine phosphorylation in the absence of BSA in both mouse and bull sperm, and the patterns of phosphorylation were similar to those induced by media containing BSA. The potency of the different -cyclodextrins to increase protein tyrosine phosphorylation in sperm was correlated with their cholesterol binding efficiencies, and preincubation of the -cyclodextrins with cholesterol-SO 4 Ϫ to saturate their cholesterol-binding sites blocked the ability of these compounds to stimulate protein tyrosine phosphorylation. The -cyclodextrin effect on protein tyrosine phosphorylation was both NaHCO 3 and protein kinase A-dependent. The -cyclodextrins were also able to capacitate mouse sperm in the absence of BSA, as measured by the ability of the zona pellucida to induce the acrosome reaction and by successful fertilization in vitro. In summary, -cyclodextrins can completely replace BSA in media to support signal transduction leading to capacitation. These data further support the coupling of cholesterol efflux to the activation of membrane and transmembrane signaling events leading to the activation of a unique signaling pathway involving the cross-talk between cAMP and tyrosine kinase second messenger systems, thus defining a new mode of cellular signal transduction initiated by cholesterol release.
We explored whether exposure of mammalian germ line stem cells to adeno-associated virus (AAV), a gene therapy vector, would lead to stable transduction and transgene transmission. Mouse germ cells harvested from experimentally induced cryptorchid donor testes were exposed in vitro to AAV vectors carrying a GFP transgene and transplanted to germ cell-depleted syngeneic recipient testes, resulting in colonization of the recipient testes by transgenic donor cells. Mating of recipient males to wild-type females yielded 10% transgenic offspring. To broaden the approach to nonrodent species, AAV-transduced germ cells from goats were transplanted to recipient males in which endogenous germ cells had been depleted by fractionated testicular irradiation. Transgenic germ cells colonized recipient testes and produced transgenic sperm. When semen was used for in vitro fertilization (IVF), 10% of embryos were transgenic. Here, we report for the first time that AAV-mediated transduction of mammalian germ cells leads to transmission of the transgene through the male germ line. Equally important, this is also the first report of transgenesis via germ cell transplantation in a nonrodent species, a promising approach to generate transgenic large animal models for biomedical research.
The dermo-epidermal interface that connects the equine distal phalanx to the cornified hoof wall withstands great biomechanical demands, but is also a region where structural failure often ensues as a result of laminitis. The cytoskeleton in this region maintains cell structure and facilitates intercellular adhesion, making it likely to be involved in laminitis pathogenesis, although it is poorly characterized in the equine hoof lamellae. The objective of the present study was to identify and quantify the cytoskeletal proteins present in the epidermal and dermal lamellae of the equine hoof by proteomic techniques. Protein was extracted from the mid-dorsal epidermal and dermal lamellae from the front feet of 5 Standardbred geldings and 1 Thoroughbred stallion. Mass spectrometry-based spectral counting techniques, PAGE, and immunoblotting were used to identify and quantify cytoskeletal proteins, and indirect immunofluorescence was used for cellular localization of K14 and K124 (where K refers to keratin). Proteins identified by spectral counting analysis included 3 actin microfilament proteins; 30 keratin proteins along with vimentin, desmin, peripherin, internexin, and 2 lamin intermediate filament proteins; and 6 tubulin microtubule proteins. Two novel keratins, K42 and K124, were identified as the most abundant cytoskeletal proteins (22.0 ± 3.2% and 23.3 ± 4.2% of cytoskeletal proteins, respectively) in equine hoof lamellae. Immunoreactivity to K14 was localized to the basal cell layer, and that to K124 was localized to basal and suprabasal cells in the secondary epidermal lamellae. Abundant proteins K124, K42, K14, K5, and α(1)-actin were identified on 1- and 2-dimensional polyacrylamide gels and aligned with the results of previous studies. Results of the present study provide the first comprehensive analysis of cytoskeletal proteins present in the equine lamellae by using mass spectrometry-based techniques for protein quantification and identification.
Mammalian sperm capacitation is the obligatory maturational process leading to the development of the fertilization-competent state. Heparin is known to be a unique species-specific inducer of bovine sperm capacitation in vitro and glucose a unique inhibitor of this induction. Heparin-induced capacitation of bovine sperm has been shown to correlate with protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent protein tyrosine phosphorylation driven by an increase in intracellular cAMP. This study examines the possible roles of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) activity and intracellular alkalinization on bovine sperm capacitation and the protein tyrosine phosphorylation associated with it. Measurement of whole cell PDE kinetics during capacitation reveals neither a substantial change with heparin nor one with glucose: PDE activity is effectively constitutive in maintaining intracellular cAMP levels during capacitation. In contrast to a transient increase in intracellular pH, a sustained increase in medium pH by switching from 5% CO(2)/95% air incubation to 1% CO(2)/99% air incubation over 4 hr in the absence of heparin resulted in an increase in protein tyrosine phosphorylation and in the extent of induced acrosome reaction comparable to that observed following heparin-induced capacitation in 5% CO(2). These results suggest that increased bicarbonate-dependent adenylyl cyclase activity, driven by alkalinization, increases intracellular cAMP and so increases PKA activity mediating protein tyrosine phosphorylation. Quantitative analysis of the lactic acid production rate by bovine sperm glycolysis accounts fully for intracellular acidification sufficient to offset heparin-induced alkalinization, thus inhibiting capacitation. The mechanism by which heparin uniquely induces intracellular alkalinization in bovine sperm leading to capacitation remains obscure, inviting future investigation.
Although the equine distal phalanx and hoof lamellae are biomechanically and physiologically integrated, bony changes in the distal phalanx are poorly described in laminitis. The aims of this study were (1) to establish a laminitis grading scheme that can be applied to the wide spectrum of lesions seen in naturally occurring cases and (2) to measure and describe changes in the distal phalanx associated with laminitis using micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) and histology. Thirty-six laminitic and normal feet from 15 performance and nonperformance horses were evaluated. A laminitis grading scheme based on radiographic, gross, histopathologic, and temporal parameters was developed. Laminitis severity grades generated by this scheme correlated well with clinical severity and coincided with decreased distal phalanx bone volume and density as measured by micro-CT. Laminitic hoof wall changes included progressive ventral rotation and distal displacement of the distal phalanx with increased thickness of the stratum internumcorium tissues with lamellar wedge formation. Histologically, there was epidermal lamellar necrosis with basement membrane separation and dysplastic regeneration, including acanthosis and hyperkeratosis, corresponding to the lamellar wedge. The changes detected by micro-CT corresponded to microscopic findings in the bone, including osteoclastic osteolysis of trabecular and osteonal bone with medullary inflammation and fibrosis. Bone changes were identified in horses with mild/early stages of laminitis as well as severe/chronic stages. The authors conclude that distal phalangeal pathology is a quantifiable and significant component of laminitis pathology and may have important implications for early detection or therapeutic intervention of equine laminitis.Keywords horse, laminitis, distal phalanx, pathology, diagnostic imaging, micro-computed tomography, x-ray microtomography, osteolysis, osteopathologyThe structural integrity of the highly specialized and complex elements composing the equine foot-including the epidermal and dermal lamellae, bone, tendons, ligaments, and other connective tissues-is essential for suspension of the distal phalanx (DP) within the hoof capsule. The interface between the equine DP and inner hoof wall is unique in that the dorsal cortex of the DP is highly porous relative to the solar cortex or to the cortices of other bones in the appendicular skeleton.39 These porosities correspond to perforating vascular channels that extend from the medullary spaces of the DP to supply the overlying lamellar tissues. 30,39 Thus, the unique interface of this specialized musculoskeletal unit provides a direct microanatomic integration between bone and epidermal/dermal lamellar tissues.Laminitis is a disease affecting the epidermal and dermal lamellae of the inner hoof wall, which often progresses to a chronic phase. The chronic phase of laminitis is characterized by inadequate tissue healing and aberrant regenerative responses that result in lamellar hyperplasia and dysplasia,...
OBJECTIVE To investigate risk factors for the development of pasture- and endocrinopathy-associated laminitis (PEAL) in horses and ponies in North America. DESIGN Case-control study. ANIMALS 199 horses with incident cases of PEAL and 351 horses from 2 control populations (healthy horses [n = 198] and horses with lameness not caused by laminitis [153]) that were evaluated in North America between January 2012 and December 2015 by veterinarian members of the American Association of Equine Practitioners. PROCEDURES North American members of the American Association of Equine Practitioners were contacted to participate in the study, and participating veterinarians provided historical data on incident cases of PEAL, each matched with a healthy control and a lameness control. Conditional logistic regression analysis was used to compare data on PEAL-affected horses with data on horses from each set of controls. RESULTS Horses with an obese body condition (ie, body condition score ≥ 7), generalized or regional adiposity (alone or in combination), preexisting endocrinopathy, or recent (within 30 days) glucocorticoid administration had increased odds of developing PEAL, compared with horses that did not have these findings. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE The present study identified several risk factors for PEAL that may assist not only in managing and preventing this form of laminitis, but also in guiding future research into its pathogenesis.
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