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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Idiopathic infertility: susceptibility of spermatozoa to in-vitro capacitation, in the presence and the absence of palmitylethanolamide (a homologue of anandamide), is strongly correlated with membrane polarity studied by Laurdan fluorescence.

Capacitation is a widely investigated process, which induces sperm plasma membrane changes resulting in its increased affinity for the zona pellucida. The fluorescent probe Laurdan, localized only within the plasma membrane of spermatozoa, is particularly useful to evaluate bilayer polarity in this part of the cell. According to a previous study, sperm membranes from oligozoospermic and some normozoospermic subjects (defined according to World Health Organization criteria), are characterized by low polarity (high Laurdan exGP(340)), while the spermatozoa from the remaining normozoospermic men show a larger polarity (low exGP(340)). In this paper, Laurdan was used to study membrane changes occurring during in-vitro capacitation, on sperm membranes from oligozoospermic and normozoospermic subjects. Results indicated that cells with high exGP(340) show a different susceptibility to Ca(2+)-induced capacitation in vitro, as compared with cells with low exGP(340). Palmitylethanolamide, physiologically present in human reproductive tracts, affects the time-course of in-vitro capacitation, increasing the rate of this process only in the cells with a lower membrane polarity.[1]

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