| Literature DB >> 26923438 |
Hubert Pausch1, Heli Venhoranta2, Christine Wurmser3, Kalle Hakala4, Terhi Iso-Touru5, Anu Sironen6, Rikke K Vingborg7, Hannes Lohi8, Lennart Söderquist9, Ruedi Fries10, Magnus Andersson11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Artificial insemination is widely used in many cattle breeding programs. Semen samples of breeding bulls are collected and closely examined immediately after collection at artificial insemination centers. Only ejaculates without anomalous findings are retained for artificial insemination. Although morphological aberrations of the spermatozoa are a frequent reason for discarding ejaculates, the genetic determinants underlying poor semen quality are scarcely understood.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26923438 PMCID: PMC4770540 DOI: 10.1186/s12863-016-0356-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Fig. 1Phenotypic manifestation of the tail stump sperm defect. Representative figures of spermatozoa of a control (a) and an affected bull (b). Spermatozoa of affected bulls had multiple aberrations such as short tails (blue star), rudimentary tails with proximal droplet (arrows), rudimentary tails without proximal droplet (yellow triangle) and coiled tails (red star). Histological sections of the testicles of a control (c) and an affected (d) bull. Numerous full-length sperm tails are present in the luminal part of the tubuli seminiferi in the control bull, whereas full-length sperm tails are absent in the affected bull
Sperm morphology in fresh ejaculates of three affected AI bulls
| Phenotype | Bull 1 | Bull 2 | Bull 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tail morphology | Normal tails | 0 % | 0 % | 0 % |
| Absent tails | 2 % | 3 % | 4 % | |
| Rudimentary tails | 45 % | 63 % | 28 % | |
| Short straight tails | 27 % | 15 % | 29 % | |
| Folded or coiled short tails | 26 % | 19 % | 39 % | |
| Head morphology | Normal heads | 42 % | 53 % | 38 % |
| Abnormal heads | 58 % | 47 % | 62 % | |
Fig. 2Homozygosity mapping in three animals with a sterilizing tail stump sperm defect. a Shades of blue represent long runs of homozygosity (ROH) in three animals along the 29 autosomes. The red borders highlight two regions on BTA13 and BTA22 with ROH in all affected animals. b Autozygosity mapping on BTA13 in three affected animals. Blue and pale blue represent homozygous genotypes (AA and BB), heterozygous genotypes (AB) are displayed in light grey. White color indicates missing genotypes. The red bar indicates a common 8.42 Mb segment of homozygosity
Fig. 3A 1 bp deletion in ARMC3 induces premature translation termination. a Snapshot from the Integrated Genomics Viewer (IGV, [51]) showing a homozygous 1 bp deletion on chromosome 13 at 24,301,425 bp in an animal with the tail stump sperm defect. b Genomic structure of bovine ARMC3. Bovine ARMC3 consists of 19 exons (vertical bars) and its translation starts in exon 2. The red vertical bar represents the eleventh exon where the 1 bp deletion is located. The coordinates of ten Armadillo (ARM) repeats were determined using the Simple Modular Architecture Research Tool [50]. Blue arrows represent the position of the start and stop codons. c The bovine ARMC3 protein sequence consists of 876 amino acids and it contains ten ARM repeats (green boxes). The red triangle represents the start of the shift in translation resulting from the 1 bp deletion. d Multi-species alignment of a part of the ARMC3 protein sequence. Blue colour highlights the protein sequence of the tenth ARM repeat, which is absent in the mutated (mt) bovine sequence