| Literature DB >> 30893764 |
Alberto Elmi1, Domenico Ventrella2, Francesca Barone3,4, Giacomo Carnevali5, Gianfranco Filippini6, Annamaria Pisi7, Stefania Benvenuti8, Maurizio Scozzoli9, Maria Laura Bacci10.
Abstract
The growing interest towards essential oils stems from their biological capabilities that include antibacterial and antioxidant effects. Such properties may be extremely useful in the reproductive field; nonetheless essential oils show toxic effects that can lead to cell disruption. The present study aimed to evaluate and compare the effects of tea tree oil (TTO) and its principal component terpinen-4-ol (TER) on the morpho-functional parameters of swine spermatozoa. Experimental samples were prepared by suspending 15 × 10⁷ spermatozoa in 5 mL of medium with different concentrations of the above-mentioned compounds: from 0.2 to 2 mg/mL at an interval of 0.2 for TTO, while TER concentrations were adjusted according to its presence in TTO (41.5%). After 3 h incubation at 16 °C, samples were analyzed for pH, viability, acrosome status, and objective motility. The results highlighted a concentration-dependent effect of TTO with total motility as the most sensitive parameter. TER was better tolerated, and the most sensitive parameters were related to membrane integrity, suggesting a different pattern of interaction. The study confirms the importance of evaluating the effects of natural compounds on spermatozoa before exploiting their beneficial effects. Spermatozoa seem to be good candidates for preliminary toxicological screenings in the light of their peculiar properties.Entities:
Keywords: essential oil; melaleuca alternifolia; swine spermatozoa; tea tree oil; terpinen-4-ol; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30893764 PMCID: PMC6471158 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24061071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Composition of tea tree oil (TTO).
| Compound | LRI 1 | Area% |
|---|---|---|
| terpinen-4-ol | 1185 | 41.49 |
| γ-terpinene | 1061 | 20.55 |
| α-terpinene | 1018 | 9.59 |
| α-terpineol | 1194 | 4.42 |
| α-pinene | 933 | 4.4 |
| 1025 | 3.66 | |
| terpinolene | 1089 | 3.18 |
| 1,8-cineole | 1031 | 2.15 |
| limonene | 1029 | 1.78 |
| aromadendrene | 1446 | 1.38 |
| caryophyllene oxide | 1594 | 0.76 |
| myrcene | 992 | 0.72 |
| allo-aromadendrene | 1468 | 0.18 |
| α-felladrene | 1005 | 0.17 |
| sabinene | 973 | 0.03 |
| β-pinene | 975 | 0.03 |
| α-humulene | 1460 | 0.02 |
| β-caryophyllene | 1425 | 0.02 |
| Total | 94.53 |
1 LRI = linear retention index.
Figure 1Effects of tea tree oil (A) and terpinen-4-ol (B) on sperm viability. Data are expressed as mean ± standard error of the mean. CTR = control samples (only emulsifiers). * = p < 0.05; ** = p < 0.01; *** = p < 0.001.
Figure 2Effects of tea tree oil (A) and terpinen-4-ol (B) on sperm acrosome reaction. Data are expressed as mean ± standard error of the mean. CTR = control samples (only emulsifiers). ** = p < 0.01; *** = p < 0.001.
Figure 3Effects of tea tree oil (A) and terpinen-4-ol (B) on total sperm motility. Data are expressed as mean ± standard error of the mean. CTR = control samples (only emulsifiers). * = p < 0.05; *** = p < 0.001.
Figure 4Effects of tea tree oil (A) and terpinen-4-ol (B) on progressive sperm motility. Data are expressed as mean ± standard error of the mean. CTR = control samples (only emulsifiers). * = p < 0.05; ** = p < 0.01; *** = p < 0.001.
Effects of tea tree oil (TTO) on sperm kinematic parameters for samples with total motility ≥20%. Data are reported as Mean (standard error of the mean), n = 9. Differences were calculated by means of Dunnett PostHoc test (* = p < 0.05; ** = p < 0.01; *** = p < 0.001).
| TTO (mg/mL) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CTR | 0.2 | 0.4 | 0.6 | 0.8 | 1 | |
| VAP (μm/s) | 80.96 (2.63) | 77.70 (3.89) | 81.02 (5.63) | 79.04 (4.37) | 72.47 (3.15) | 54.95 (7.87) *** |
| VCL (μm/s) | 180.75 (5.62) | 173.34 (8.61) | 186.84 (12.73) | 180.77 (6.22) | 165.14 (6.14) | 132.98 (16.83) ** |
| VSL (μm/s) | 41.10 (1.73) | 37.30 (2.00) | 34.35 (2.29) | 33.33 (2.19) | 32.02 (1.27) | 25.36 (2.16) *** |
| DAP (μm) | 48.19 (1.39) | 47.37 (1.89) | 49.14 (2.77) | 48.08 (2.41) | 44.78 (2.11) | 36.71 (4.19) ** |
| DCL (μm) | 110.20 (3.49) | 106.94 (4.83) | 115.65 (6.59) | 112.55 (3.62) | 104.97 (5.06) | 86.34 (9.86) * |
| DSL (μm) | 22.71 (0.79) | 20.88 (0.96) | 18.45 (0.94) * | 18.27 (1.12) * | 18.11 (0.32) * | 15.24 (0.83) *** |
| LIN (%) | 22.74 (0.60) | 22.58 (0.55) | 19.54 (0.86) | 20.07 (1.32) | 21.03 (1.25) | 21.41 (1.60) |
| STR (%) | 50.90 (1.09) | 48.67 (0.97) | 43.19 (1.28) ** | 43.37 (2.16) * | 46.48 (2.42) | 47.43 (3.03) |
| WOB (%) | 45.16 (0.32) | 45.00 (0.35) | 43.64 (0.89) | 44.48 (1.02) | 44.06 (0.83) | 43.96 (0.97) |
| ALH (μm) | 9.50 (0.26) | 8.88 (0.38) | 9.55 (0.69) | 10.01 (0.44) | 9.54 (0.66) | 8.65 (1.01) |
| BCF(Hz) | 37.75 (1.15) | 37.34 (0.77) | 38.15 (0.99) | 36.60 (2.89) | 34.94 (1.38) | 35.11 (2.75) |
VAP = velocity average path; VCL = velocity curved line; VSL = velocity straight line; DAP = distance average path: DCL = distance curved line; DSL = distance straight line; LIN = linearity (VSL/VCL); STR = straightness (VSL/VAP); WOB = wobble (VAP/VCL); ALH = amplitude of lateral head displacement; BCF = beat cross frequency.
Effects of Terpinen-4-ol (TER) on sperm kinematic parameters for samples with total motility ≥20%. Data are reported as Mean (standard error of the mean), n = 9. Differences were calculated by means of Dunnett PostHoc test (* = p < 0.05; ** = p < 0.01; *** = p < 0.001).
| TER (mg/mL) | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CTR | 0.08 | 0.17 | 0.25 | 0.33 | 0.42 | 0.50 | 0.58 | 0.67 | 0.75 | 0.83 | |
| Equivalent to TTO (mg/mL) | |||||||||||
| 0.2 | 0.4 | 0.6 | 0.8 | 1 | 1.2 | 1.4 | 1.6 | 1.8 | 2 | ||
| VAP (µm/s) | 88.12 (2.26) | 92.15 (4.46) | 92.29 (4.22) | 95.19 (5.92) | 90.17 (5.92) | 86.83 (6.27) | 87.91 (5.09) | 87.89 (5.61) | 78.58 (5.71) | 75.39 (6.40) | 75.41 (4.92) |
| VCL (µm/s) | 200.47 (5.82) | 212.65 (12.22) | 219.15 (7.81) | 223.22 (8.89) | 212.76 (9.48) | 200.71 (12.55) | 202.52 (11.31) | 203.59 (11.60) | 188.61 (13.59) | 172.23 (12.16) | 170.46 (10.83) |
| VSL (µm/s) | 44.32 (1.63) | 44.77 (1.56) | 36.71 (3.73) | 37.25 (1.88) | 36.68 (3.25) | 34.88 (2.86) * | 35.54 (2.87) ** | 33.78 (1.90) ** | 27.72 (2.33) *** | 28.15 (1.97) *** | 29.19 (2.61) *** |
| DAP (µm) | 51.32 (1.53) | 54.01 (2.78) | 54.23 (2.78) | 55.39 (3.32) | 53.45 (3.73) | 51.58 (3.34) | 51.15 (3.42) | 50.77 (4.66) | 48.48 (3.01) | 44.37 (4.45) | 45.79 (2.48) |
| DCL (µm) | 119.94 (3.40) | 127.73 (8.35) | 132.63 (3.80) | 134.08 (5.57) | 129.96 (7.87) | 123.33 (6.62) | 122.08 (7.39) | 124.67 (7.34) | 121.17 (7.45) | 108.95 (6.67) | 107.95 (6.26) |
| DSL (µm) | 23.62 (1.31) | 24.27 (0.98) | 19.08 (2.18) | 19.36 (1.33) | 19.28 (0.99) | 18.06 (0.82) * | 18.25 (0.94) * | 17.88 (1.10) * | 15.32 (1.25) *** | 15.24 (1.10) *** | 16.13 (1.41) *** |
| LIN (%) | 22.93 (1.28) | 22.67 (1.68) | 18.15 (1.81) | 18.16 (1.25) | 18.74 (1.42) | 20.09 (1.35) | 17.03 (1.15) * | 17.47 (0.50) * | 15.95 (0.66) * | 16.66 (0.69) * | 16.23 (1.81) ** |
| STR (%) | 49.45 (2.11) | 48.83 (2.65) | 41.79 (3.25) | 41.04 (2.60) | 41.66 (2.51) | 41.52 (1.71) | 41.32 (0.91) | 39.64 (1.20) * | 36.99 (1.48) ** | 38.67 (2.19) ** | 39.01 (1.62) ** |
| WOB (%) | 10.31 (0.30) | 10.57 (0.59) | 174.74 (0.36) | 11.38 (0.34) | 11.08 (0.52) | 10.95 (0.37) | 43.55 (0.37) | 42.98 (0.68) | 42.28 (0.78) | 43.54 (0.81) | 44.29 (1.16) |
| ALH (µm) | 10.31 (0.30) | 10.57 (0.59) | 11.25 (0.39) | 11.38 (0.36) | 33.08 (0.34) | 10.95 (0.52) | 11.44 (0.42) | 11.30 (0.51) | 12.34 (1.59) | 10.67 (0.58) | 10.67 (0.39) |
| BCF (Hz) | 45.05 (3.30) | 43.52 (3.95) | 48.68 (7.60) | 42.48 (4.63) | 41.13 (5.56) | 36.21 (1.82) | 32.47 (1.01) | 36.27 (1.82) | 40.78 (5.74) | 34.56 (2.00) | 33.38 (2.29) |
VAP = velocity average path; VCL = velocity curved line; VSL = velocity straight line; DAP = distance average path: DCL = distance curved line; DSL = distance straight line; LIN = linearity (VSL/VCL); STR = straightness (VSL/VAP); WOB = wobble (VAP/VCL); ALH = amplitude of lateral head displacement; BCF = beat cross frequency.
Simple linear regression models’ angular coefficients (β).
| Tea Tree Oil | Terpinen-4-ol | |
|---|---|---|
| V % | −0.091 (−0.104; −0.079) | 0.094 (0.010; 0.178) |
| TotM % | −0.080 (−0.090: −0.070) | 0.049 (0.008; 0.091) |
| ProgM % | −0.163 (−0.185; −0.141) | 0.017 (−0.043; 0.077) |
| AR % | 0.100 (0.086; 0.114) | −0.089 (−0.237; 0.060) |
| pH value | −2.071 (−10.308; 6.166) | 4.348 (−8.203; 16.899) |
C.I. = Confidence Interval; V = Viability; TotM = Total Motility; ProgM = Progressive Motility; AR = Acrosome Reaction.
Figure 5Scanning electron micrographs for the effects of the lowest, middle, and highest concentrations of tea tree oil (TTO) and erpinen-4-ol (TER) on sperm morphology. (a) control sample; (b) TTO 0.2 mg/mL; (c) TTO 1 mg/mL); (d) TTO 2 mg/mL; (e) control sample; (f) TER 0.08 mg/mL; (g) TER 0.42 mg/mL; (h) TER 0.83 mg/mL.
Concentrations of tea tree oil (TTO) and Terpinen-4-ol (TER) used in the study. TER concentrations were calculated according to its presence in the used TTO (41.5%).
| TTO (mg/mL) | TER (41.5 %) (mg/mL) |
|---|---|
| 2 | 0.83 |
| 1.8 | 0.75 |
| 1.6 | 0.67 |
| 1.4 | 0.58 |
| 1.2 | 0.5 |
| 1 | 0.42 |
| 0.8 | 0.33 |
| 0.6 | 0.25 |
| 0.4 | 0.17 |
| 0.2 | 0.08 |