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Capacitation
Capacitation is the final step in the maturation of mammalianspermatozoaand is required to render them competent to fertilizean oocyte.
This step is a biochemical event; the sperm move normally and look mature prior to capacitation.
In vivo this final step typically occurs after ejaculation, in the female reproductive tract.
In vitro, capacitation can occur in sperm that have either undergone ejaculation or have been extracted from the epididymis.
Non-mammalian spermatozoa do not require this capacitation step and are ready to fertilize an oocyte immediately after release from the male.
Historically, the term "capacitation" has evolved in meaning and this should be taken into account when consulting sources.
See also
- cortical reaction
- Acrosome reaction
Reference
- Beaudin, Stacey; Kipta, Donna; and Orr, Annamarie. (October 9, 1996). Current research into sperm capacitation: An Essay on Visconti, et al. Development 121: 1129-1150 (1995). Verified availability 2005-04-06.
- Visconti, Pablo E.; Bailey, Janice L.; Moore, Grace D.; Pan, Dieyun; Olds-Clarke, Patricia; and Kopf, Gregory S. (1995). Capacitation of mouse spermatozoa: I. Correlation between the capacitation state and protein tyrosine phosphorylation. Development 121, 1129-1137. PMID 7743926. full article text available on-line
de:Kapazitation
Categories: Reproductive system| Germ cells| Andrology| Cell biology stubs
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitation Wikipedia article Capacitation.
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