New treatments for infertility could be closer to reality, thanks to a discovery from scientists at the University of Montreal and Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital Research Centre. According to a study published in the journal Molecular Human Reproduction, the researchers have become the first to clone, produce and purify a protein important for sperm maturation, termed Binder of Sperm, which may have implications for both fertility treatments and new methods of male contraception
New treatments for infertility could be closer to reality, thanks to a discovery from scientists at the University of Montreal and Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital Research Centre. According to a study published in the journal Molecular Human Reproduction, the researchers have become the first to clone, produce and purify a protein important for sperm maturation, termed Binder of Sperm, which may have implications for both fertility treatments and new methods of male contraception. (c) University of Montreal and Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital Research Centre
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Researchers clone key sperm-binding proteins

Science Centric | 19 March 2009 14:12 GMT
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New treatments for infertility could be closer to reality, thanks to a discovery from scientists at the Universite de Montreal and Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital Research Centre. According to a study published in the journal Molecular Human Reproduction, the researchers have become the first to clone, produce and purify a protein important for sperm maturation, termed Binder of Sperm (BSP), which may have implications for both fertility treatments and new methods of male contraception.

'We have previously isolated and characterised BSPs from many species, such as bulls and boars,' says Dr Puttaswamy Manjunath, senior author and a professor in the departments of medicine and of biochemistry at the Universite de Montreal and a member of the Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital Research Centre.

'We know from these studies that if this protein is missing or defective in these species, fertility is compromised. We believe that BSP is equally important in humans.'

Dr Manjunath and colleagues have tried to isolate human BSPs for more than 10 years. In most mammals, these proteins are typically produced by the seminal vesicles and added to sperm at ejaculation. Yet this is not the case for humans, primates and rodents. According to DrManjunath and his team, these species produce small amounts of BSPs only in the epididymis, a duct that connects the testes to the urethra.

'For a few years, we were looking in the wrong place,' says Dr Manjunath. 'In addition, the minute quantities of BSP produced in humans has made it impossible to isolate and characterise.'

Dr Manjunath and his team went back to the basics. Using molecular biology technique they cloned the gene (DNA) that encodes human BSP. Through cloning, they were able to produce and purify this protein.

'After considerable troubleshooting, we were able to produce functional human BSP. Our next steps are to confirm its biological role in human fertility,' says Dr Manjunath.

Following ejaculation, sperm undergo a complex series of modifications inside the female reproductive tract. The changes sperm undergo during this process include redistribution of surface proteins, loss of sperm membrane lipids and increased sperm movement. A family of sperm-binding proteins (BSPs) secreted by the seminal vesicles has been shown to be essential for sperm maturation in female reproductive tracts of cows, sheep, pigs and other hoofed animals.

Source: University of Montreal


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