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Human sperm rotate with a conserved direction during free swimming in four dimensions

Journal of Cell Science, ISSN: 1477-9137, Vol: 136, Issue: 22
2023
  • 5
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 10
    Captures
  • 1
    Mentions
  • 16
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    5
  • Captures
    10
  • Mentions
    1
    • News Mentions
      1
      • News
        1
  • Social Media
    16
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      16
      • Facebook
        16

Most Recent News

Report Summarizes Germ Cells Study Findings from National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) (Human sperm rotates with a conserved direction during free-swimming in 3D)

2023 NOV 13 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at NewsRx Life Science Daily -- Investigators discuss new findings in germ cells. According

Article Description

Head rotation in human spermatozoa is essential for different swimming modes and fertilisation, as it links the molecular workings of the flagellar beat with sperm motion in three-dimensional (3D) space over time. Determining the direction of head rotation has been hindered by the symmetry and translucent nature of the sperm head, and by the fast 3D motion driven by the helical flagellar beat. Analysis has been mostly restricted to two-dimensional (2D) single focal plane image analysis, which enables tracking of head centre position but not tracking of head rotation. Despite the conserved helical beating of the human sperm flagellum, human sperm head rotation has been reported to be uni- or bi-directional, and even to intermittently change direction in a given cell. Here, we directly measure the head rotation of freely swimming human sperm using multi-plane 4D (3D+t) microscopy and show that: (1) 2D microscopy is unable to distinguish head rotation direction in human spermatozoa; (2) head rotation direction in non-capacitating and capacitating solutions, for both aqueous and viscous media, is counterclockwise (CCW), as seen from head to tail, in all rotating spermatozoa, regardless of the experimental conditions; and (3) head rotation is suppressed in 36% of spermatozoa swimming in non-capacitating viscous medium, although CCW rotation is recovered after incubation in capacitating conditions within the same viscous medium, possibly unveiling an unexplored aspect of the essential need of capacitation for fertilisation. Our observations show that the CCW head rotation in human sperm is conserved. It constitutes a robust and persistent helical driving mechanism that influences sperm navigation in 3D space over time, and thus is of critical importance in cell motility, propulsion of flagellated microorganisms, sperm motility assessments, human reproduction research, and self-organisation of flagellar beating patterns and swimming in 3D space.

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