Stallion
sperm membranes contain high levels of polyunsaturated fatty acids, making them
particularly susceptible to lipid peroxidation. While spermatozoa of other
species lose motility following peroxidative damage, stallion spermatozoa have evolved
defences against this motility loss despite accumulating high levels of peroxidative adducts such as 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE). As stallion spermatozoa
are highly dependent on oxidative phosphorylation for ATP production, this
adaptation may have developed as a protective measure against elevated ROS
production due to mitochondrial superoxide leakage. Subsequently, positive
correlations between 4-HNE (measured flow-cytometrically using an anti-4-HNE antibody)
and computer-assisted sperm assessment parameters of total motility (R2=0.46),
rapid motility (R2=0.51), VAP (R2=0.62) and VCL (R2=0.56)
were apparent after 48h at RT. It was hypothesised that this paradoxical
relationship may be due to stallion spermatozoa possessing high levels of
mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH2), an enzyme responsible for the
scavenging of toxic aldehyde products, primarily 4-HNE. By virtue of its
locality, this enzyme may actively remove peroxidative adducts from proteins of
the sperm tail, preventing the immediate loss of motility which is observed in
glycolytic spermatozoa of the human under the same conditions. PCR analysis confirmed
ALDH2 expression by stallion spermatozoa, and flow-cytometric measurement of
ALDH activity using the Aldefluor™ probe uncovered highly significant positive
correlations between ALDH expression and progressive motility (R2=0.62),
rapid motility (R2=0.63), linearity (R2=0.41), VAP (R2=0.50),
VSL (R2=0.55) and VCL (R2=0.44). Immunocytochemistry was
performed to ascertain both the locality of ALDH expression and the pattern of
4-HNE adduction in both untreated and 4-HNE treated spermatozoa. As predicted,
ALDH was most highly expressed in the mid-piece, and 4-HNE mid-piece adducts
were minimal, with adduction being limited to the post-acrosomal region and
principle piece, regardless of treatment. These results indicate that ALDH2
activity is the primary mechanism for the amelioration of ROS-induced
peroxidative damage and motility loss in stallion spermatozoa.