Potassium-dependent increases in cytosolic pH stimulate metabolism and motility of mammalian sperm.
- 1 March 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 80 (5) , 1327-1331
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.80.5.1327
Abstract
Sperm cytosolic pH, determined by the spectral properties of intracellular carboxyfluorescein, is decreased rapidly by the diffusion and subsequent dissociation of the uncharged weak acids pyruvic, lactic or hydroxybutyric and is increased by diffusion and subsequent intracellular protonation of the weak base NH3. Metabolic and kinetic activity increases dramatically when intracellular pH is elevated about 6.8-6.9 by addition of 50 mM NH4Cl to sperm suspended in a 120 mM NaCl medium. Respiratory stimulation is not observed upon comparable additions of 50 mM Li+ or K+ or when the pH of the medium is increased from 6.5 to 8.2. Increases of the external pH to 7.8-8.2 in medium employing 120 mM KCl result in increased metabolic and kientic activity, comparable to the maximal stimulation induced by the phosphodiesterase inhibitor caffeine. An increase in cytosolic pH from 6.3-6.6 to 6.8 occurs concomitant with the respiratory stimulated induced by KCl in alkaline media. No change in cytosolic pH follows addition of caffeine. AMP-dependent protein kinase activity ratios, determined in cellular extracts, are increased by caffeine treatment but are not elevated by 120 mM KCl, by alkaline pH or by their combination. Cytosolic pH plays a role in the regulation of motility and metabolism of mammalian sperm that is not mediated by cAMP but that may be under control of a plasma membrane voltage-dependent proton channel. H+ fluxes across vesicles prepared from sperm membranes are unaffected by variation in the magnitude of the transvesicular K+ concentration gradient.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
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