| Literature DB >> 26194886 |
Amirouche Chikhoune1, Laurence Stouvenel2, Mokrane Iguer-Ouada3, Mohamed Hazzit4, Alain Schmitt2, Patrick Lorès2, Jean Philippe Wolf5, Kamel Aissat6, Jacques Auger5, Daniel Vaiman2, Aminata Touré7.
Abstract
Traditional medicine has been used worldwide for centuries to cure or prevent disease and for male or female contraception. Only a few studies have directly investigated the effects of herbal compounds on spermatozoa. In this study, essential oil from Thymus munbyanus was extracted and its effect on human spermatozoa in vitro was analysed. Gas chromatography and Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analyses identified 64 components, accounting for 98.9% of the composition of the oil. The principal components were thymol (52.0%), γ-terpinene (11.0%), ρ-cymene (8.5%) and carvacrol (5.2%). Freshly ejaculated spermatozoa was exposed from control individuals to various doses of the essential oil for different time periods, and recorded the vitality, the mean motility, the movement characteristics (computer-aided sperm analysis), the morphology and the ability to undergo protein hyperphosphorylation and acrosomal reaction, which constitute two markers of sperm capacitation and fertilizing ability. In vitro, both the essential oil extracted from T. munbyanus and thymol, the principal compound present in this oil, impaired human sperm motility and its capacity to undergo hyperphosphorylation and acrosome reaction. These compounds may, therefore, be of interest in the field of reproductive biology, as potential anti-spermatic agents.Entities:
Keywords: Thymus munbyanus; acrosome reaction; motility; protein hyperphosphorylation; spermatozoa; thymol
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26194886 DOI: 10.1016/j.rbmo.2015.06.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Biomed Online ISSN: 1472-6483 Impact factor: 3.828