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Researchers identify ABHD2 as compound needed for sperm activation

Posted: 21 March 2016 | Victoria White | No comments yet

The finding may lead to new options for male contraception as well as treatments for infertility resulting from problems with sperm mobility…

Researchers have discovered the cellular switch that boosts the activity of sperm cells so that they can travel to the egg. 

The finding may lead to new options for male contraception as well as treatments for infertility resulting from problems with sperm mobility. 

Inside the male reproductive tract, mature sperm are capable of limited movement. This limited movement, however, is not enough to propel them toward the egg when they enter the female reproductive tract. To begin their journey, they must first be activated by the hormone progesterone, which is released by the egg. 

The researchers, funding by the US National Institute of Health (NIH), report that the molecule to which progesterone must bind is the enzyme alpha/beta hydrolase domain containing protein 2 (ABHD2), found in the sperm cell’s outer membrane.

Compounds that block ABHD2 may yield new contraceptive methods

Commenting on the discovery, Stuart Moss, Ph.D, director of the male reproductive health programme at NIH’s Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, said: “This is an important advance in explaining how sperm become hypermotile in the female reproductive tract.  Developing new compounds that block ABHD2 ultimately may yield new contraceptive methods to prevent sperm from reaching the egg.”

Similarly, strategies to bypass or enhance the enzyme might provide therapies for treating infertility resulting from sperm that lack movement capability.

Before a sperm can transition to the hyper-active phase, calcium must pass through the cell’s outer membrane and enter the flagella, the tail-like appendage the cell uses to propel itself.  The sperm protein known as CatSper joins with similar proteins in the flagella to allow the entry of calcium. 

When the researchers undertook the current study, it was not known whether progesterone interacted directly with CatSper to trigger the calcium influx, or acted on some other molecule (which, in turn, acted on CatSper). Before treating sperm with progesterone, the researchers exposed them to a chemical that inhibits a particular class of enzymes that they believed could include the candidate molecule that acted on CatSper. The hunch proved correct: the treated cells remained inactive after progesterone exposure, indicating that CatSper was not directly involved.

Working with modified progesterone, the researchers eventually isolated ABHD2 from the sperm tails. When the researchers inactivated ABHD2, exposure to progesterone failed to activate the sperm cells, confirming that ABHD2 is the molecular target for progesterone.