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Biophysical Journal 29: 167-176 (1980)
© 1980 the Biophysical Society

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Observation of flagellation of spermatozoa by depolarized laser light scattering.

H Shimizu and G Matsumoto

ABSTRACT

Depolarized laser light-scattering theory was applied to derive the autocorrelation function of laser light scattered by motile spermatozoa, assuming that each spermatozoon is a chain of rotatable rigid ellipsoids of revolution and also that the rotational velocity about an axis perpendicular to the symmetry axis of the ellipsoid is constant for times of the order of the characteristic decay time of the autocorrelation function. The rotations are produced by flagellar movements of the spermatozoa. The correlation function thus obtained was related to the second-order coefficient of a Legendre polynomial expansion of the rotation of the direction angle of the ellipsoidal axis. The experimental fact that the correlation function for dead spermatozoa of sea urchin resembled that for flagella mechanically separated from spermatozoa indicated to us that the depolarized light was scattered mainly by flagella. The rotational velocity distribution of the flagella was determined by comparing the theoretical analysis with the experimentally obtained correlation functions for the motile and dead spermatozoa. The value of the average velocity caused by the flagellation, 230 rad/s, was in good agreement with that measured under an optical microscope.







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Copyright © 1980 by the Biophysical Society.