Methylene blue-mediated antimicrobial photodynamic therapy on chicken semen.

Autor: Novaes, GA, Blank, MH, Yoshimura, TM, Ribeiro, MS, Pereira, RJG
Zdroj: Photodiagnosis & Photodynamic Therapy; Mar2023, Vol. 41, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Abstrakt: • Semen extenders for birds have antibiotics that augment bacterial resistance;. • Methylene blue-mediated PDT was explored to decontaminate chicken semen;. • PDT protocol was selected to maintain sperm activity;. • Optimal PDT protocols were unable to reduce bacterial load in seminal plasma. Artificial insemination is widely employed in poultry, but high degrees of bacterial contamination are often observed in semen because of its passage through the cloaca. Consequently, most semen extenders for birds have antibiotics that could aggravate bacterial resistance. We evaluated the potential of antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (PDT) as an alternative to the use of antibiotics, and assessed whether changes in concentration and incubation time with methylene blue (MB), radiant exposure, and irradiance of light affect spermatozoa activity and bacteria in chicken semen. Incubation with MB (< 25 µM) did not alter sperm motility, regardless of the pre-irradiation time (PIT, 1 or 5 min). Following 1 min of PIT with MB at 10 µM, samples were irradiated for 30, 60, 120, and 180 s at irradiances of 44, 29, and 17 mW/ cm² (660 nm LedBox). MB and light alone did not interfere with the analyzed parameters. However, when both factors were associated, increases in light dose led to greater reductions in sperm parameters, regardless of the irradiance used. Besides, PDT conditions that were less harmful to spermatozoa were not able to significantly reduce bacterial colonies in chicken semen. A failure in MB selectivity could explain unsuccessful bacterial reduction following PDT. Further research involving other photosensitizers or conjugating molecules to MB to target microbial cells is needed for PDT application in poultry breeders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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