Influence of BMI, Cigarette Smoking and Cryopreservation on Tyrosine Phosphorylation during Sperm Capacitation.

Int J Mol Sci

IVIRMA Global Research Alliance, IVI Foundation, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria La Fe, Avenida Fernando Abril Martorell, 106-Torre A, Planta 1ª, 46026 Valencia, Spain.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Capacitation in sperm involves tyrosine phosphorylation (TP), a key marker, but lifestyle factors like obesity and smoking affect semen quality without a clear understanding of their mechanisms on TP.
  • A study analyzed TP levels in sperm from 40 donors and found that being overweight or smoking did not significantly change the percentage of sperm showing TP, but did relate to higher basal TP levels and increases after incubation.
  • Additionally, while cryopreservation slightly raised TP levels after capacitation, most thawed samples showed increased TP levels, indicating that lifestyle and cryopreservation impact TP dynamics during sperm capacitation.

Article Abstract

Capacitation involves tyrosine phosphorylation (TP) as a key marker. Lifestyle-related factors, such as obesity and smoking, are recognized for their adverse effects on semen quality and male fertility, yet the underlying mechanisms, including their potential impact on TP, remain unclear. Moreover, the effect of sperm cryopreservation on TP at the human sperm population level is unexplored. Flow cytometry analysis of global TP was performed on pre-capacitated, post-capacitated and 1- and 3-hours' incubated fresh and frozen-thawed samples from sperm donors ( = 40). Neither being overweight nor smoking (or both) significantly affected the percentage of sperm showing TP. However, elevated BMI and smoking intensity correlated with heightened basal TP levels (r = 0.226, = 0.003) and heightened increase in TP after 3 h of incubation (r = 0.185, = 0.017), respectively. Cryopreservation resulted in increased global TP levels after capacitation but not immediately after thawing. Nonetheless, most donors' thawed samples showed increased TP levels before and after capacitation as well as after incubation. Additionally, phosphorylation patterns in fresh and frozen-thawed samples were similar, indicating consistent sample response to capacitation stimuli despite differences in TP levels. Overall, this study sheds light on the potential impacts of lifestyle factors and cryopreservation on the dynamics of global TP levels during capacitation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11276716PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms25147582DOI Listing

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