Human seminal plasma alpha-L-fucosidase (EC 3.2.1.51) has been purified 7100-fold to very high purity and specific activity (83,000 nmol/min/mg protein) by affinity chromatography on agarose-epsilon-aminocaproyl-fucopyranosylamine. The purified alpha-L-fucosidase appeared to contain a single subunit of 56-57 kDa (as determined by SDS-PAGE and Western analysis). Lectin blotting and N-glycanase treatment studies indicated that this subunit is N-glycosylated and contains sialic acid residues. Human seminal plasma alpha-L-fucosidase was shown to contain three multimeric forms of 110, 236 and 314 kDa respectively (as determined by Sephadex G-200 chromatography) and therefore probably exists in dimeric, tetrameric and hexameric forms. Kinetic analysis with the 4-methylumbelliferyl-alpha-L-fucopyranoside (4MU-Fuc) substrate indicated a broad acidic optimum (pH 4.0-4.5) with a second neutral optimum (pH 6.4-7.4) with 60-80% of maximal activity. Apparent K(M) and V(max) values for the 4MU-Fuc substrate were determined to be 0.06 mmol/l and 92 micromol/min/mg protein respectively, using Lineweaver-Burk double reciprocal plots. Isoelectric focusing and neuraminidase treatment studies provided further evidence that the purified seminal plasma alpha-L-fucosidase is a sialoglycoprotein with several isoforms between pI values 5-7. The acidic isoforms between pI values 5-6 appear to be related chemically to the more neutral isoforms by sialic acid residues since neuraminidase treatment converted the former into the latter isoforms.
Human semen contains a large amount of alpha-L-fucosidase activity, the great majority of which is found in the seminal fluid. Immunocytochemical studies indicate that a small amount of semen fucosidase activity is present on the sperm plasma membrane, primarily in the posterior head region. Subcellular fractionation studies also indicate that sperm alpha-L-fucosidase is present in the plasma membrane-enriched fraction. Comparative characterization of human seminal fluid and sperm alpha-L-fucosidases indicates that seminal fluid alpha-L-fucosidase has a broad pH optimum curve with a number of near-equal maxima between pH 4.8 and 7.0 while sperm fucosidase has a major optimum between pH 3.4 and 4.0. Isoelectric focusing indicates that seminal fluid alpha-L-fucosidase contains three to six isoforms with isoelectric points (pI) of 5-7 while sperm fucosidase contains two distinct isoforms with pI values of 5. 2 +/- 0.2 and 7.0 +/- 0.2. Western blotting indicates that seminal fluid fucosidase contains a major protein band with a molecular mass ratio (M(r)) of approximately 56 kDa while sperm fucosidase contains a major protein band of approximately 51 kDa. The overall results indicate the presence of a low-abundance, plasma membrane-associated human sperm alpha-L-fucosidase, which is different in its properties from human seminal fluid alpha-L-fucosidase(s), and whose function is not yet known.
Detergent and salt extraction studies, as well as cytochemical localization with fluorescein isothiocyanate-bovine serum albumin-L-fucose, have provided further evidence for the plasma membrane association of a novel human sperm, alpha-L-fucosidase. This alpha-L-fucosidase has been solubilized and purified 8600-fold to high specific activity (35 000 U/mg protein) by affinity chromatography on agarose-C(24)-fucosylamine. To our knowledge, this is the first report concerning the purification and characterization of a mammalian plasma membrane-associated alpha-L-fucosidase. Both SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis indicated the alpha-L-fucosidase is highly purified and contains a single subunit with a molecular mass of 51 kDa. N-glycanase studies indicated the subunit contains N-glycans, and lectin blot analysis detected the presence of mannose, but no terminal galactose or sialic acid residues. Isoelectric focusing indicated the presence of two major alpha-L-fucosidase isoforms (pIs 6.5 and 6.7) and a possible minor isoform (pI 6.3). Treatment of alpha-L-fucosidase with neuraminidase did not change its isoform profile, providing further evidence for the enzyme's lack of sialic acid residues. Kinetic analysis with 4-methylumbelliferyl alpha-L-fucopyranoside indicated that sperm alpha-L-fucosidase has a pH optimum near 7, an apparent K(m) of 0.08 mM, and a V(max) of 6.8 micro mol/min/mg protein. The unusual properties of human sperm alpha-L-fucosidase argue in support of a potentially important, but presently unknown, role for this enzyme in human reproduction.
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