JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, P.H.S.
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Attachment and release of spermatozoa from the caudal isthmus of the hamster oviduct.

Female hamsters were mated shortly after the onset of oestrus. At 3 or 6 h after mating, the right oviduct was flushed in situ with 30, 90 or 180 microliters medium to remove spermatozoa from the lumen, leaving only those firmly attached to the isthmic mucosa of the oviduct. When eggs were recovered from oviducts at 20 h after flushing the majority were fertilized, indicating that the spermatozoa that were firmly attached to the mucosa were capable of detaching and ascending to the ampulla to fertilize eggs. Neither the time of flushing nor the volume of flushing medium had a significant effect on the percentage of spermatozoa that remained in the isthmus after flushing. These results suggest that there is no change in the surface of the oviduct mucosa that causes the release of spermatozoa from the caudal isthmus near the time of ovulation. When incapacitated spermatozoa were introduced into the oviduct, many of them attached to oviductal mucosa, while capacitated spermatozoa did not. This indicates that it is a change in the sperm surface, rather than the mucosal surface, that causes the release of spermatozoa, i.e. spermatozoa remain attached to the isthmic mucosa until they become capacitated and then detach and migrate to the ampulla to fertilize the eggs.

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