Literature DB >> 29882506

Review: Testicular vascular cone development and its association with scrotal thermoregulation, semen quality and sperm production in bulls.

J P Kastelic1, G Rizzoto1, J Thundathil1.   

Abstract

Several structural and functional features keep bull testes 2°C to 6°C below body temperature, essential for the production of morphologically normal, motile and fertile sperm. The testicular vascular cone (TVC), located above the testis, consists of a highly coiled testicular artery surrounded by a complex network of small veins (pampiniform plexus). The TVC functions as a counter-current heat exchanger to transfer heat from the testicular artery to the testicular vein, cooling blood before it enters the testis. Bulls with increased TVC diameter or decreased distance between arterial and venous blood, have a greater percentage of morphologically normal sperm. Both the scrotum and testes are warmest at the origin of their blood supply (top of scrotum and bottom of testis), but they are cooler distal to that point. In situ, these opposing temperature gradients result in a nearly uniform testicular temperature (top to bottom), cooler than body temperature. The major source of testicular heat is blood flow, not testicular metabolism. High ambient temperatures have less deleterious effects on spermatogenesis in Bos indicus v. Bos taurus bulls; differences in TVC morphology in B. indicus bulls confer a better testicular blood supply and promote heat transfer. There is a long-standing paradigm that testes operate on the brink of hypoxia, increased testicular temperature does not increase blood flow, and the resulting hypoxia reduces morphologically normal and motile sperm following testicular hyperthermia. However, in recent studies in rams, either systemic hypoxia or increased testicular temperature increased testicular blood flow and there were sufficient increases in oxygen uptake to prevent tissue hypoxia. Therefore, effects of increased testicular temperature were attributed to testicular temperature per se and not to secondary hypoxia. There are many causes of increased testicular temperature, including high ambient temperatures, fever, increased recumbency, high-energy diets, or experimental insulation of the scrotum or the scrotal neck. It is well known that increased testicular temperatures have adverse effects on spermatogenesis. Heat affects all germ cells and all stages of spermatogenesis, with substantial increases in temperature and/or extended intervals of increased testicular temperature having the most profound effects. Increased testicular temperature has adverse effects on percentages of motile, live and morphologically normal sperm. In particular, increased testicular temperature increases the percentage of sperm with abnormal morphology, particularly head defects. Despite differences among bulls in the kind and percentage of abnormal sperm, the interval from increased testicular temperature to the emergence of specific sperm defects is consistent and predictable. Scrotal surface temperatures and structural characteristics of the testis and TVC can be assessed with IR thermography and ultrasonography, respectively.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bovine; cattle; fertility; scrotal/testicular thermoregulation; semen quality

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29882506     DOI: 10.1017/S1751731118001167

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Animal        ISSN: 1751-7311            Impact factor:   3.240


  7 in total

1.  Testicular Ultrasound Analysis as a Predictive Tool of Ram Sperm Quality.

Authors:  Melissa Carvajal-Serna; Sara Miguel-Jiménez; Rosaura Pérez-Pe; Adriana Casao
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-08

2.  Increased testicular blood flow maintains oxygen delivery and avoids testicular hypoxia in response to reduced oxygen content in inspired air.

Authors:  G Rizzoto; C Hall; J V Tyberg; J C Thundathil; N A Caulkett; J P Kastelic
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-07-19       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  The Effects of Decreasing Dietary Crude Protein on the Growth Performance, Feed Efficiency and Meat Quality of Finishing Charolais Bulls.

Authors:  Martina Cortese; Severino Segato; Igino Andrighetto; Nicola Ughelini; Maria Chinello; Eliana Schiavon; Giorgio Marchesini
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2019-11-01       Impact factor: 2.752

4.  Dimethyloxaloylglycine promotes spermatogenesis activity of spermatogonial stem cells in Bama minipigs.

Authors:  Yaqi Cao; ZiFu Dai; Huizhen Lao; Huimin Zhao
Journal:  J Vet Sci       Date:  2022-03       Impact factor: 1.672

5.  Seasonal variation in bull semen quality demonstrates there are heat-sensitive and heat-tolerant bulls.

Authors:  Jacob K Netherton; Benjamin R Robinson; Rachel A Ogle; Allan Gunn; Ana Izabel S Balbin Villaverde; Kim Colyvas; Ced Wise; Tylah Russo; Amiee Dowdell; Mark A Baker
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-09-12       Impact factor: 4.996

6.  Probing the Potential Mechanism of Quercetin and Kaempferol against Heat Stress-Induced Sertoli Cell Injury: Through Integrating Network Pharmacology and Experimental Validation.

Authors:  Dian-Long Liu; Si-Jia Liu; Su-Qin Hu; Yu-Cai Chen; Jian Guo
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2022-09-22       Impact factor: 6.208

7.  Sperm Transcripts Associated With Odorant Binding and Olfactory Transduction Pathways Are Altered in Breeding Bulls Producing Poor-Quality Semen.

Authors:  Thirumalaisamy Karuthadurai; Dayal Nitai Das; Arumugam Kumaresan; Manish Kumar Sinha; Elango Kamaraj; Pradeep Nag; John Peter Ebenezer Samuel King; Tirtha Kumar Datta; Ayyasamy Manimaran; Sakthivel Jeyakumar; Kerekoppa Ramesha
Journal:  Front Vet Sci       Date:  2022-02-22
  7 in total

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