The Sperm’s Journey Studied By Rehovot Scientists
Two-degree difference. Eisenbach and his colleagues hatched their theory about the role of temperature differences in fertilization when they came across previous studies that noted a two-degree difference in the genital tracts of rabbits and a 0,9-degree difference in pigs. However, it was unclear whether the egg heats up or the sperm storage site cools down. In their own experiments in rabbits, Eisenbach and his colleagues determined the temperature around the egg was closest to normal body temperature, meaning it's the sperm storage site that gets chilly.
Heat-guided missiles. In the lab, researchers then created a special chamber that mimics the temperature difference in the genital tract. They watched rabbit sperm swim, and sure enough, the sperm made a beeline from cool temperatures to the warmer climes. Sperm, acting like little heat-guided missiles, sensed temperature differences as small as 0,5 degrees, the smallest difference tested in the study. "This gives us important new understandings of the mechanism of fertilization," Eisenbach says. Researchers later placed human sperm in a similar chamber and saw the same reaction.
The sperm’s journey. When sperm enters the female genital tract, they embark on a long, complicated journey that's fraught with hazards. After passing the uterus, sperm cells enter the woman's fallopian tubes. Once inside a tube, sperm attach themselves to the tube's wall, where they pause for "storage" during a maturation process that prepares them for penetrating the egg. The maturation process can take about 20 minutes, Eisenbach says. From there, the sperm detaches themselves from the wall and leave the storage site. If ovulation has occurred in the preceding 24 hours, releasing an egg ready for fertilization, the mature sperm head for it.
Chemical substance released. Previous research by Eisenbach found the egg calls upon the sperm by releasing a chemical substance. However, the chemical signal can attract the sperm only across a short distance, Eisenbach says. Since the tube normally moves in a wavelike motion, the chemical cannot spread effectively through the entire tube and therefore cannot call to the sperm over long distances.
Temperature just one factor. The distance between the vagina and the egg fertilization site is about seven centimetres to 10 centimetres, says Dr James Grifo, director of the Division for Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at New York University Medical Centre. The distance between the sperm storage site and the egg is a few centimetres. "It's been known that there's a chemical attraction from sperm to egg," Grifo says. "People had suspected other factors could play a role. These researchers have found temperature could also contribute. From a basic scientific perspective, it's a very interesting finding." Grifo says the new knowledge will probably not improve in vitro fertilization, because the egg and the sperm are placed so close together the sperm hardly need to navigate at all. In some cases, the sperm is actually implanted into the egg. – (HealthScout News)"
Source: Sperm like it hot: Like moths to the flame, sperm are guided to the egg by heat, new research says. Health24.com (Last viewed 22 October 2005) [FullText]
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