Artículos de revistas
Potassium Current in Mature Bovine Spermatozoa
Fecha
2008Registro en:
SYSTEMS BIOLOGY IN REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE, v.54, n.6, p.231-239, 2008
1939-6368
10.1080/19396360802419366
Autor
MARCONI, Marcelo
SANCHEZ, Raul
ULRICH, Henning
ROMERO, Fernando
Institución
Resumen
Ion channels have been assigned a pivotal importance in various sperm functions and are therefore promising targets for contraceptive development. The lack of data on channel functionality and pharmacology has hampered this goal. This is a consequence of technical problems of applying electrophysiological techniques to spermatozoa due to their small size and form. By using a laminin coating to increase adherence of spermatozoa and nystatin in the patch pipette for pore formation, we have adapted the whole-cell recording technique to study currents in mature uncapacitated bovine spermatozoa. Employing these conditions, in the head region, patched spermatozoa could be transferred into the whole-cell configuration. For the first time we document an outward rectifying current in mature bovine spermatozoa was blocked by tetraethyl ammonium (TEA) chloride. The observation of a shift in the reversal potential as a response to changes in the extracellular concentration of K+ ions allowed us to identify this current as K+ selective. This result shows that K+ channels in the head region of mature uncapacitated bovine spermatozoa can be suitably investigated using the whole-cell recording patch-clamp technique.