Initiation of Sperm Motility Induced by Cyclic AMP in Hamster and Boar

Abstract
When the plasma membrane of hamster and boar spermatozoa was extracted by treatment with Triton X-100 and the demembranated spermatozoa were transferred to a reactivating medium containing only ATP, axonemes were initially immotile, and then gradually became motile. Under these experimental conditions, the cAMP content in the reactivating medium increased soon. This suggests that cAMP is synthesized from ATP by adenylate cyclase involved in incompletely removed or solubilized residual sperm membrane and that the autosynthesized cAMP causes the delay in motility initiation. This delayed initiation of motility did not occur when phosphodiesterase was added to the reactivating medium and the phosphodiesterase-dependent quiescent sperm became motile instantaneously at any time when excess cAMP was supplemented. Furthermore, demembranated sperm which were diluted in the reactivating medium containing ATP and cAMP, immediately became motile. cAMP levels in the cell increased during the initiation of sperm motility in both species. These results suggest that cAMP is the real factor indispensable for the initiation of sperm motility at ejaculation in mammals.