| Literature DB >> 12749940 |
Viviana A Aires1, Klaus Dieter Hinsch, Frank Mueller-Schloesser, Katja Bogner, Susanne Mueller-Schloesser, Elvira Hinsch.
Abstract
Semen diluents containing egg yolk as a cryoprotectant may pose hygienic risks and are difficult to standardize. Although a new generation of semen diluents free of animal ingredients is available, egg yolk-containing extenders are still widely used for cryopreserving semen. We compared the effects of using different extenders on bovine sperm function in vitro and on fertility in vivo. A soy lecithin extender (SL; AndroMed) and an egg yolk-containing (TRIS-EY) extender were tested. No differences (P>0.05) were detected between the two extenders for sperm-zona pellucida binding capacity (HZI=115+/-13). Assessment of the inducibility of the acrosome reaction with progesterone showed no differences (P>0.05) between extenders for live acrosome-reacted sperm (15+/-2.36 and 14.42+/-2.02%, respectively, for SL and TRIS-EY). However, post-thaw sperm motility was significantly lower (P<0.05) when semen was extended in the TRIS-EY diluent. Field trials revealed that nonreturn rates of SL-extended semen showed significantly higher insemination success (P<0.0001) compared with the nonreturn rates for the TRIS-EY extender (70.45 and 67.85%, respectively). We suggest that consistent with quality standards that should be required for cryoprotectant media and because of the superior quality of the egg yolk-free extender, a defined soybean lecithin-containing diluter might be the better choice as a semen extender in the future.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12749940 DOI: 10.1016/s0093-691x(02)01369-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theriogenology ISSN: 0093-691X Impact factor: 2.740