Sialyl-Lewis(x) interaction for sperm selection in assisted reproductive treatment: abridged secondary publication
PCN Chiu, WSB Yeung, EHY Ng, CL Lee
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
- Capacitated human spermatozoa initiate fertilisation via binding to the zona pellucida (ZP). The sialyl-Lewis(x) (sLeX) sequence is the most abundant terminal sequence on the glycans of human ZP glycoproteins involved in spermatozoa-ZP binding. Compared with unbound spermatozoa, ZP- or sLeX-bound spermatozoa have better fertilisation potential and quality in terms of morphology, DNA integrity, chromatin integrity, protamination, and global methylation.
- Four sLeX-binding proteins of capacitated spermatozoa were identified: chromosome 1 open reading frame 56 (C1orf56), ZP-binding protein 1, heat shock-related 70 kDa protein 2, and sperm acrosome membrane–associated protein 1.
- Clorf56 translocated to the cell surface of the spermatozoa acrosomal region during capacitation. Treatment with anti-C1orf56 antibody inhibited spermatozoa-ZP binding and ZP-induced acrosomal reactions. Purified C1orf56 from capacitated spermatozoa were able to bind human ZP.
- The in vitro fertilisation rate was not associated with the percentage of capacitated spermatozoa expressing C1orf56. However, the percentage of C1orf56-positive spermatozoa in the acrosome-reacted population was significantly lower in cycles with a fertilisation rate <60% than in cycles with a fertilisation rate ≥60%. These results suggest that C1orf56 has important roles after ZP-binding and acrosomal reactions.
- Sperm quality can be significantly enhanced by selection methods involving ZP, sLeX, and annexin V microbeads.