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From the * Laboratory of Molecular Cell Biology,
Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological
Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, Peoples' Republic of China;
and the
Department of Urology, Tongji Hospital,
Tongji University, Shanghai, Peoples' Republic of China.
Present address: Department of Neurology, Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical school, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115.
| Correspondence to: Dr Li He Guo, Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 320 Yue Yang Road, Shanghai 200031, People's Republic of China (e-mail: mhzhang{at}sunm.shcnc.ac.cn) or to Jian Fei (e-mail: jfei{at}sibs.ac.cn). |
-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glutamate (Glu) are considered as the
predominant inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmitters in mammalian central
nervous systems (CNS), respectively. The presence of the GABA system and
metabotropic glutamate receptors in sperm prompted us to explore the existence
of ionotropic glutamate receptors and glutamate transporters in sperm.
Immunofluorescent analysis was used to investigate the existence and location
of glutamate, glutamate receptor (NR2B), and glutamate transporter (GLT1) in
mouse and human sperm. Our present results showed that NR2B was located in the
midpiece of sperm, whereas GLT1 mainly existed in the head. Moreover,
glutamate uptake activity was detected in mouse sperm and it could be blocked
by dihydrokainic acid (DHK, GLT1-selective inhibitor) and
DL-threo-beta-hydroxyaspartic acid (THA, nonselective inhibitor). In addition,
reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction technique and sequencing
analysis revealed that glutamate transporters (GLT1 and EAAC1) and ionotropic
glutamate receptors (NR1, NR2B, GluR6, and KA2) existed in mouse sperm as well
as in human sperm. The present findings are the first direct evidence for the
existence of ionotropic glutamate receptors and glutamate transporters in
sperm. It also indicates that, in sperm, glutamate receptors and transporters
might have functions other than neurotransmission.
Key words: Uptake, immunocytochemistry, RT-PCR, inhibitor
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