Human sperm chemotaxis: both the oocyte and its surrounding cumulus cells secrete sperm chemoattractants

Fei Sun(Weizmann Institute of Science), Anat Bahat(American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science), Anna Gakamsky(American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science), Eliezer Girsh(Barzilai Medical Center), Nathan Katz(Barzilai Medical Center), Laura C. Giojalas(Universidad Nacional de Córdoba), Ilan Tur-Kaspa(Barzilai Medical Center), Michael Eisenbach(Weizmann Institute of Science)
Human Reproduction
February 17, 2005
Cited by 157Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Human sperm chemotaxis to pre-ovulatory follicular fluid is well established in vitro. However, it is not known whether the female's oocyte-cumulus complex secretes sperm chemoattractants subsequent to ovulation (for enabling sperm chemotaxis within the Fallopian tube) and, if so, which of these cell types--the oocyte or the cumulus oophorus--is the physiological origin of the secreted chemoattractant. METHODS: By employing a directionality-based chemotaxis assay, we examined whether media conditioned with either individual, mature (metaphase II) human oocytes or the surrounding cumulus cells attract human sperm by chemotaxis. RESULTS: We observed sperm chemotaxis to each of these media, suggesting that both the oocyte and the cumulus cells secrete sperm chemoattractants. CONCLUSIONS: These observations suggest that sperm chemoattractants are secreted not only prior to ovulation within the follicle, as earlier studies have demonstrated, but also after oocyte maturation outside the follicle, and that there are two chemoattractant origins: the mature oocyte and the surrounding cumulus cells.


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