Literature DB >> 18578952

Evaluation of chromatin integrity of motile bovine spermatozoa capacitated in vitro.

Z Reckova1, M Machatkova, R Rybar, J Horakova, P Hulinska, L Machal.   

Abstract

The efficiency of in vitro embryo production is highly variable amongst individual sires in cattle. To eliminate that this variability is not caused by sperm chromatin damage caused by separation or capacitacion, chromatin integrity was evaluated. Seventeen of AI bulls with good NRRs but variable embryo production efficiency were used. For each bull, motile spermatozoa were separated on a Percoll gradient, resuspended in IVF-TALP medium and capacitated with or incubated without heparin for 6 h. Samples before and after separation and after 3-h and 6-h capacitacion or incubation were evaluated by the Sperm Chromatin Structure Assay (SCSA) and the proportion of sperm with intact chromatin structure was calculated. Based on changes in the non-DFI-sperm proportion, the sires were categorized as DNA-unstable (DNA-us), DNA-stable (DNA-s) and DNA-most stable (DNA-ms) bulls (n=3, n=5 and n=9, respectively). In DNA-us bulls, separation produced a significant increase of the mean non-DFI-sperm proportion (p <or= 0.01), as compared with the value before separation. Capacitacion produced a significant decrease in the mean non-DFI-sperm proportion in H+ sperm (p <or= 0.01). In DNA-s bulls, separation significantly increased the mean non-DFI-sperm proportion (p <or= 0.01) but during capacitacion, the mean non-DFI-sperm proportion remained almost unchanged. In DNA-ms bulls, neither separation nor capacitacion had any effect on the mean non-DFI-sperm proportion. It can be concluded that, although separation and capacitacion may produce some changes in sperm chromatin integrity, these are not associated with different in vitro fertility of the bulls involved.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18578952     DOI: 10.1017/S0967199408004772

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Zygote        ISSN: 0967-1994            Impact factor:   1.442


  1 in total

1.  A cost for high levels of sperm competition in rodents: increased sperm DNA fragmentation.

Authors:  Javier delBarco-Trillo; Olga García-Álvarez; Ana Josefa Soler; Maximiliano Tourmente; José Julián Garde; Eduardo R S Roldan
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2016-03-16       Impact factor: 5.349

  1 in total

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