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Human Reproduction Update, Vol.5, No.2 pp.141-152, 1999
© European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology 1999; all rights reserved

Recent biochemical approaches to post-testicular, epididymal contraception

TG Cooper0 and CH Yeung

Institute of Reproductive Medicine of the University, Münster, Germany 0 Corresponding author at: Institute of Reproductive Medicine of the University, Domagkstrasse 11, D-48129 Münster, Germany e-mail: cooper@uni-muenster.de

Abstract

Results from recent animal models with implications for putative human male contraceptives acting on the epididymis are reviewed. Inducing sterility by enhancing sperm transport through the epididymis has not been achieved. The induction of infertility in males of several species is easier to achieve by direct actions of drugs on sperm function (e.g. inhibition of sperm-specific isoenzymes of the glycolytic pathway by chloro-compounds) than by indirectly reducing amounts of epididymal secretions normally present in high concentration (e.g. {alpha}-glucosidase, L-carnitine). The former show promise for the clinic since human spermatozoa are susceptible to inhibition. On the other hand, the infertile male mice of the c-ros knock-out model demonstrate the influence of even a small region of the epididymis on fertility, so that targeting the as yet unknown epididymal factors presumably secreted in limiting amounts by this epididymal segment, is a new lead for a contraceptive. Targeting a specific sperm protein acquired in the testis, but depleted in the epididymis by toxicants that induce rapid infertility, may also lead to the discovery of new contraceptives, but these will require developing new means of organ-specific delivery of contraceptive drugs.

Keywords: animal models/antifertility/contraception/epididymis/male infertility


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