| Literature DB >> 26208436 |
Kazutoshi Nishijima1, Shuji Kitajima2, Chihiro Koshimoto3, Masatoshi Morimoto2, Teruo Watanabe2, Jianglin Fan4, Yukihisa Matsuda5.
Abstract
This study was conducted to investigate whether soy lecithin can be used as an alternative cryoprotectant to establish a procedure that does not require the use of egg yolk to cryopreserve rabbit strains. Semen from Japanese White rabbits was frozen with HEPES extender containing 20% egg yolk (EYH), 0.5% (Lec-0.5), 1.5% (Lec-1.5), 2.5% (Lec-2.5), or 3.5% (Lec-3.5; wt/vol) lecithin (type IV-S, ≥30%), and the motility of thawed sperm was analyzed. The sperm motility in the Lec-1.5 group was significantly higher than that in the Lec-2.5 and 3.5 groups and equivalent to the EYH group. From 17 rounds of artificial insemination with frozen-thawed sperm in the EYH and Lec-1.5 groups, 12 rabbits in both groups were pregnant (70.6%) and delivered offspring. The litter size was 3.3 in the EYH group and 5.1 in the Lec-1.5 group. These results indicate that soy lecithin can be used as a substitute for egg yolk as a cryoprotectant on the basis of motility and fertility of the frozen-thawed rabbit sperm and that 1.5% lecithin (type IV-S, ≥30%) in the semen extender was the optimum concentration for rabbit sperm cryopreservation.Entities:
Keywords: Cryoprotectant; Fertility; Soybean lecithin; Sperm cryopreservation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26208436 DOI: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2015.06.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theriogenology ISSN: 0093-691X Impact factor: 2.740