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Human Reproduction Update 1999, Vol. 5, No.4 pp. 277–279 E European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology Mini symposium The role of carbohydrates in reproduction Editor: Richard Ivell Institute for Hormone and Fertility Research, University of Hamburg, Grandweg 64, D-22529 Hamburg, Germany Introduction It is not only in popular songs and love poetry that ‘sugar, sugar’ is associated with procreation. In this special minisymposium six international research groups have summarized the role of sugars and carbohydrates in a diverse range of molecules and tissues of the reproductive system. All are involved in some way with the co-ordination and functioning of the complex interactions which are essential for successful fertility. Carbohydrates in the reproductive system have been neglected for a long time, mostly because they have been difficult to describe at the molecular level. There are two reasons for this difficulty. Firstly, they can be extremely variable even when attached to the same substrate molecule. Secondly, we have not until recently had adequate and sufficiently sensitive methods to estimate the molecular structures involved in any particular carbohydrate moiety. With improvement in purification and separation technologies, and especially in the use of nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectroscopy techniques, scientists are now beginning to unravel the intricacies and structural flexibility of what the glycosidic bond can achieve. Proteins and nucleic acids are made up of relatively simple linear strings of the component units (amino acids or nucleotides), which themselves can only be linked in a single way with no stereotopic variations. This means that determination of at least the primary structure can be determined from the sequential removal of one building block after another. And at least in the case of nucleic acids, a lot of information about the secondary structure can then be predicted from this primary sequence. In the case of carbohydrates this is quite different. There are a relatively large number of simple monosaccharides, e.g. fructose or fucose, which can be linked together. These links can occur in more than one way, so that for carbohydrates we have both branching of chains, and stereoisomerism at the glycosidic bonds. Then, nucleic acids and proteins are constructed following very precise linear templates in specialized molecular machines (e.g. ribosomes, transcriptional complexes), such that variation for any gene product is limited to minor heterogeneities only. For carbohydrates, the blueprints are determined more by the sequential functioning of different enzymes, each of only limited specificity, and in a less organized fashion. The result is much more heterogeneity of the resulting carbohydrate moiety, even though the initial substrate for glycosylation, for example the protein backbone of a particular glycoprotein, is the same. Nevertheless, carbohydrates can have several very specific functions depending on their structures, locations and dimensions. Because the sugar residues can co-ordinate large amounts of water, they effectively shift the pI of any protein to which they are attached. Good examples are the glycoproteohormones (Willey, 1999) or their receptors (Wheatley and Hawtin, 1999), which denuded of their glycosylation have a highly basic pI. This can have drastic consequences on any interactions involving either a conformational change in the protein, or an ionic interaction with another molecule. Secondly, by co-ordinating large numbers of water molecules the carbohydrate moiety can become quite bulky, though of low relative density. Many extracellular molecules, whether cell surface proteins or secreted proteins are glycosylated. Partly this is to create specific recognition surfaces, but partly also to act as lubricants in a three-dimensional extracellular environment where shear forces at the molecular level could cause substantial damage to cell surfaces. A good example here is the production of mucins in the gut and reproductive tract (Lagow et al., 1999). An extension of this role is seen within the cervix during cervical dilatation in the perinatal period. Here the proportion of the small proteoglycans such as decorin, biglycan or fibromodulin relative to collagen increases markedly, these small glycosylated molecules apparently 278 R.Ivell intercalating between the collagen fibres, thus allowing cervical distension without extensive injury (Kokenyesi and Woesner, 1991; Leppert, 1995). A further example is suggested in this issue (Salustri et al., 1999), where one of the functions for ovarian proteoglycans may be to increase the viscosity of follicular fluid, as well as encourage desirable intercellular interactions. A major role of glycosylation, however, is in the creation of specific molecular surfaces which allow equally specific intermolecular recognition. Most commonly we consider the interactions between carbohydrate moieties and plant lectins in this category. While in general these are thought of as useful tools for analytical histochemistry, they are in fact only one example of a more widespread phenomenon with great importance in biological systems. For the reproductive biologist, one of the best examples is the interaction between the spermatozoa and the zona pellucida of the oocyte (Benoff, 1997; Töpfer-Petersen, 1999). There may be very high specificity in some of these interactions. The recent studies on the protein glycodelin are a good illustration of this. This protein is made in both male and female reproductive tracts and in both locations is glycosylated. However, the types of glycosylation differ, giving rise to so-called glycodelin A from the female tract and glycodelin S from the male tract, even though the peptide backbone in each case is identical. Whereas glycodelin S is either neutral or possibly protective toward sperm functions, glycodelin A has been shown to have clear inhibitory effects on sperm–oocyte interaction (Morris et al., 1996) and has been implicated as contributing to the contraceptive activity of levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine devices (Mandelin et al., 1997). A similar tissue-specific differential glycosylation has also been described for the principal sperm surface antigen CD52 (Schröter et al., 1999). This small glycoprotein is made both by lymphocytes and by the epididymal epithelium from where it is transferred to the maturing sperm surface. However, the nature of the glycosylation by the two cell types is quite different. This interesting molecule also highlights another potential role for glycosylation in the context of reproduction and fertility. CD52 is a product predominantly of the cauda epididymis and the vas deferens and appears to coat the whole of the sperm surface fairly indiscriminately to form the major sperm surface antigen. The peptide backbone is very small, but this is mostly obscured from extracellular interactions by the large degree of glycosylation. This has led to the speculation that the CD52 coating antigen is first transferred to the sperm surface after the majority of other surface maturation events involving interactions in the epididymis have occurred, and thus could serve to block subsequent sperm interactions. This blocking effect of glycosylation is similar to that described for the MUC1 gene product in the uterus at implantation (Lagow et al., 1999). Only when this gene is down-regulated can the blastocyst–endometrial interactions occur which lead to implantation. Finally, because of the different possibilities to form branched chains in the core structure of a carbohydrate sidechain, and together with the different types of monosaccharides that can be attached peripherally to this core, there is an enormous potential for variability in the resulting tree-like structure. In some cases this variability per se might be of biological importance. It has been suggested that it might be responsible in part for the so-called immunosuppressive properties of the sperm glycocalyx. The variability of the exposed surface functioning somewhat like the variable surface of some invading parasites, although the underlying mechanisms are certainly different. Quite how this would work is not clear, and one should not forget at the same time that injected spermatozoa are quite immunogenic, and that a large number of monoclonal antibodies raised against the sperm surface recognize defined glycosyl moieties, which may be involved in specific sperm interactions (Koyama et al., 1991; Kameda et al., 1992). The last few years have seen a massive input by molecular biology at the level of amino acid and nucleotide sequences, which without doubt has led to vast leaps in our understanding of the physiological processes behind reproduction. Until now the role of carbohydrates here has been somewhat neglected. The six articles presented in this special mini-symposium are intended to illustrate the sort of advances we can expect when similar technological methods are applied to investigate the role of glycoslyation in reproductive function. However, in contrast, to what we have learnt about other types of biopolymer, the glycoconjugates are likely to prove often confusing and conflicting in what they tell us about basic priciples of glycobiology. In an excellent review on the biological role of oligosaccharides (Varki, 1993), a very important point is made: ‘Many different theories have been advanced concerning the biological roles of the oligosaccharide units of individual classes of glycoconjugates. Analysis of the evidence indicates that while all of these theories are correct, exceptions to each can also be found. The biological roles of oligosaccharides appear to span the spectrum from those that are trivial, to those that are crucial for the development, growth, function or survival of an organism’. References Benoff, S. (1997) Carbohydrates and fertilization: an overview. Mol. Hum. Reprod., 3, 599–637. Kameda, K., Tsuji, Y., Koyama, K. et al. (1992) Comparative studies of the antigens recognized by sperm-immobilizing monoclonal antibodies. Biol. Reprod., 46, 349–357. Kokenyesi, R., Woessner, J.F. (1991) Effects of hormonal perturbations on the small dermatan sulfate proteoglycan and mechanical properties of the uterine cervix of late pregnant rats. Connect. Tissue Res., 26, 199–205. Koyama, K., Kameda, K., Nakamura, N. et al. (1991) Recognition of carbohydrate antigen epitopes by sperm-immobilizing antibodies in sera of infertile women. Fertil. Steril., 56, 954–959. Lagow, E., De Souza, M.M. and Carson, D.D. (1999) Mammalian reproductive tract mucins. Hum. Reprod. Update, 5, 280–292. Introduction Leppert, P.C. (1995) Anatomy and physiology of cervical ripening. Clin. Obstet. Gynecol., 38, 267–279. Mandelin, E., Koistinen, H., Koistinen, R. et al. (1997) Levonorgestrelreleasing intrauterine device-wearing women express contraceptive glycodelin A in endometrium during mid-cycle: another contraceptive mechanism? Hum. Reprod., 12, 2671–2675. Morris, H.R., Dell, A., Easton, R.L. et al. (1996) Gender-specific glycosdylation of human glycodelin affects its contraceptive activity. J. Biol. Chem., 271, 32159–32167. Salustri, A., Camaioni, A., Di Giacomo, M. et al. (1999) Hyaluronan and proteoglycans in ovarian follicles. Hum. Reprod. Update, 5, 293–301. 279 Schröter, S., Osterhoff, C., McArdle, W. and Ivell, R. (1999) The glycocalyx of the sperm surface. Hum. Reprod. Update, 5, 302–313. Töpfer-Petersen, E. (1999) Carbohydrate-based interactions on the route of a spermatozoon to fertilization. Hum. Reprod. Update, 5, 314–329. Varki, A. (1993) Biological roles of oligosaccharides: all of the theories are correct. Glycobiology, 3, 97–130. Wheatley, M. and Hawtin, S.R. (1999) Glycosylation of G-protein-coupled receptors for hormones central to normal reproductive functioning: its occurrence and role. Hum. Reprod. Update, 5, 356–364. Willey, K.P. (1999) An elusive role for glycosylation in the structure and function of reproductive hormones. Hum. Reprod. Update, 5, 330–355.