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Journal of Experimental Biology 29,66-71 (1952)
Published by Company of Biologists 1952


The Physiology of Sea-Urchin Spermatozoa : The Nature and Location of the Endogenous Substrate

LORD ROTHSCHILD 1 and K. W. CLELAND 1

1 Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, and the Marine Station, Millport

1. Sea-urchin spermatozoa (Echinus esculentus) contain 4·14 mg. phospholipid per 1010 spermatozoa (arithmetic mean of five replicated experiments, standard error 0·06). This amount of phospholipid is about 5·5% of the dry weight of a sea-urchin spermatozoon.

2. The seminal plasma contains very small quantities of phospholipid, about 20 mg./100 ml., less than one-thirtieth the content of fresh semen.

3. When sea-urchin semen was diluted 1:20 with sea water and the spermatozoa incubated aerobically for some 7 hr.at 20°C., phospholipid disappeared. The average disappearance per 1010 spermatozoa was 19·0% (S.E. 2·4), while the corresponding oxygen uptake of the same sperm suspensions during the same time was 1·450 ml. (S.E. 0·118). The oxidation of glycogen or glycogen-like material was found to be entirely insufficient to account for the observed oxygen consumption.

4. Assuming that the combustion of 1 mg. phospholipid requires 1·6 ml. oxygen, the ratio of the theoretical oxygen uptake (associated with the observed disappearance of phospholipid) to the observed oxygen uptake was 0·86 (S.E. 0·04).

5. It is concluded that the oxidative breakdown of phospholipid, located in the middle-piece, is the principal source of the energy required for movement.

Note:

Nuffield Dominions Fellow, on leave from the Department of Histology and Embryology, University of Sydney, at the Chester Beatty Research Institute.

Submitted on June 16, 1951




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J. R. Claybrook and L. Nelson
Flagellar Adenosine Triphosphatase from Sea Urchin Sperm: Properties and Relation to Motility
Science, December 6, 1968; 162(3858): 1134 - 1136.
[Abstract] [PDF]




© The Company of Biologists Ltd 1952