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1 Division of Reproductive
Biology, Department of Obstetrics and
Gynecology, and Department
of Physiology, University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Spermatozoa from the cauda epididymidis of the mouse
bind 3-quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB), a highly specific
antagonist of the muscarinic type of acetylcholine receptor; inhibition of in vitro fertilization of mouse eggs
parallels this binding. Characterization of 3H-QNB
binding to mouse spermatozoa by means of Scatchard
and Hill plots showed a single class of non-interacting
sites with KD = 5 nM. The stereospecificity of this site
was determined by testing the ability of specific probes
to displace competitively 3H-QNB bound to spermatozoa. Unlabeled QNB, atropine, and scopolamine,
which are antagonists of muscarinic receptors, and carbamylcholine and muscarine, which are agonists, competed with 3H-QNB for the spermatozoon binding site.
Propylbenzilylcholine mustard (PrBCM), a specific, irreversible antagonist of muscarinic sites, did not compete for the 3H-QNB binding site. Those compounds
that occupied the QNB binding site on mouse spermatozoa also inhibited the fertilization of the zona-pellucida-intact mouse eggs in vitro, whereas PrBCM,
which did not occupy the binding site, had no effect on
fertilization. There was a close correspondence between
the affinity of these compounds for the QNB binding
site and their ability to inhibit fertilization. This correspondence held for both agonists and antagonists of
muscarinic sites. From these results, we conclude that
the 3H-QNB binding site of mouse spermatozoa differs
from the conventional class of muscarinic sites: while
the steric requirements are similar, they are far from
identical. This fact suggests that compounds could be
synthesized that would be potent inhibitors of fertilization by binding on the sperm surface, but would have
no effect on neural tissues. Such compounds would
offer a new approach to the design of male fertility
control agents.
Key words: sperm binding, cholinomimetics
Submitted on July 13, 1981
Revised on August 31, 1981
Accepted on August 31, 1981
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