Mortimer D, Johnson A V, Long-Simpson L K
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Calgary Health Sciences Centre, Alberta, Canada.
Int J Fertil. 1988 Jul-Aug;33(4):291-5.
Leakage of glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT) can be used as an indicator of cryo-damage for mammalian spermatozoa. However, two GOT isozymes exist: mitochondrial (m-GOT) and cytosolic or soluble (s-GOT), with acid and alkaline pH optima, respectively. The levels of these GOT isozymes were determined in samples of cell-free human seminal plasma and sperm extracts over a pH range of 3.8 to 9.6. Optimum GOT activities were found at pH 5.2 using cacodylate-HCl buffer (m-GOT) and pH 8.4 using barbital buffer (s-GOT). Differential inhibition studies with adipate (which inhibits s-GOT) were misleading because of the presence of another NADH-linked enzyme able to use adipate as a substrate. Only relatively low levels of m-GOT could be extracted from human spermatozoa (21.4 +/- 31.5 [SD] mU/10(8) cells vs. 202.3 +/- 49.4 mU/mL seminal plasma; n = 20). Consequently, future studies on GOT leakage should be carried out at the alkaline pH optimum, and will therefore measure s-GOT, making this a marker for plasma membrane integrity rather than a measure of mitochondrial damage.