Journal of Andrology, Vol. 23, No. 6, November/December 2002
Copyright © American Society of Andrology
Lignosulfonic Acid Blocks In Vitro Fertilization of Macaque Oocytes When Sperm Are Treated Either Before or After Capacitation
THEODORE L. TOLLNER*,
JAMES W. OVERSTREET*,
MING W. LI*,
STUART A. MEYERS
,
ASHLEY I. YUDIN*,
EDWARD R. SALINAS
AND
GARY N. CHERR
,
From the * Division of Reproductive Biology,
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the
Department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Cell
Biology, School of Veterinary Medicine, the
Bodega Marine Laboratory, and the
Departments of Environmental Toxicology and
Nutrition, University of California, Davis, California.
| Correspondence to: Gary N. Cherr, Bodega Marine Laboratory, University of
California, Davis, PO Box 247, 2099 Westside Road, Bodega Bay, CA, 94923
(e-mail:
gncherr{at}ucdavis.edu). |
Lignin-derived macromolecules (LDMs) are biologically active compounds that
affect a variety of cell-to-cell interactions including the inhibition of
fertilization and embryo development in a number of nonmammalian species. The
effect of ligno-sulfonic acid (LSA), a highly sulfonated LDM, on cynomolgus
macaque sperm-oocyte interaction was evaluated with a zona pellucida binding
assay and by in vitro fertilization (IVF). Sperm were treated with LSA (1.5
mg/mL) either before washing or after capacitation. Capacitation included
centrifugation through 80% Percoll followed by 2 consecutive washes with
medium, overnight incubation, and activation with dibutyryl cyclic adenosine
monophosphate and caffeine. The zona binding assay was performed using
immature oocytes that had adhered to the center of glass "binding
chambers." The number of capacitated sperm that attached to the zona
over a 3-minute period was recorded. Sperm attachment was significantly
inhibited by LSA as compared to controls whether treatment occurred after
capacitation (92.5%; P < .001) or before washing (82.5%;
P < .001). When sperm were treated similarly with fucoidin, a
sulfated polysaccharide known to inhibit sperm-oocyte interaction, sperm-zona
binding was significantly inhibited by postcapacitation treatment but not by
prewash treatment. Treatment of sperm with LSA consistently blocked
fertilization over 4 IVF cycles both before washing and after capacitation.
Fertilization rate for controls was 65% ± 17%. No LSA-treated sperm
were observed on the surface of lightly rinsed oocytes after 4 hours of
coincubation. Localization of biotinylated LSA showed labeling over the entire
sperm surface with the greatest intensity observed over the head and midpiece.
LSA treatment had no effect on the percentage of motile sperm or quality of
sperm motility. Due to the antifertility properties of this nontoxic molecule,
LSA appears to have potential as a vaginal contraceptive.
Key words: Contraception, fucoidin, microbicide, polysulfonation, zona pellucida
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Copyright © 2002 by The American Society of Andrology.