Following ejaculation, sperm functions are regulated by interactions with the environment found in the female genital tract. Here spermatozoa become 'capacitated' (i.e. they acquire the capability of completing the acrosome reaction and successfully fertilizing the egg), through a series of surface and intracellular transformations occurring during a process known as capacitation. The limited number of spermatozoa that eventually reach the oocyte must then cross the surrounding cumulus cells before contacting the zona pellucida, undergoing the aerosome reaction and finally fertilizing the oocyte. All the interactions between sperm and their diverse environments are mediated by intracellular signaling pathways. Virtually all the signaling systems known to operate in somatic cells, with the exception of those implying nuclear activity, have been found in spermatozoa, although in some cases the function(s) of the pathway has not been clearly proved.

Signal transduction pathways in human spermatozoa / E. BALDI; M. LUCONI; L. BONACCORSI; G. FORTI. - In: JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 0165-0378. - STAMPA. - 53:(2002), pp. 121-131. [10.1016/S0165-0378(01)00089-4]

Signal transduction pathways in human spermatozoa.

BALDI, ELISABETTA;LUCONI, MICHAELA;BONACCORSI, LORELLA;FORTI, GIANNI
2002

Abstract

Following ejaculation, sperm functions are regulated by interactions with the environment found in the female genital tract. Here spermatozoa become 'capacitated' (i.e. they acquire the capability of completing the acrosome reaction and successfully fertilizing the egg), through a series of surface and intracellular transformations occurring during a process known as capacitation. The limited number of spermatozoa that eventually reach the oocyte must then cross the surrounding cumulus cells before contacting the zona pellucida, undergoing the aerosome reaction and finally fertilizing the oocyte. All the interactions between sperm and their diverse environments are mediated by intracellular signaling pathways. Virtually all the signaling systems known to operate in somatic cells, with the exception of those implying nuclear activity, have been found in spermatozoa, although in some cases the function(s) of the pathway has not been clearly proved.
2002
53
121
131
E. BALDI; M. LUCONI; L. BONACCORSI; G. FORTI
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/383
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