Effects of bovine oviductal proteins on bull spermatozoal function
Autor: | P. M. Summers, R.M Briggs, A.C Boquest, D.M Duganzich, J.F Smith |
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Rok vydání: | 1999 |
Předmět: |
Male
endocrine system animal structures Cell Survival Acrosome reaction Motility Biology Epithelium Andrology Food Animals medicine Animals Small Animals Acrosome Incubation Fallopian Tubes Sperm motility Estradiol Tissue Extracts urogenital system Equine Acrosome Reaction Proteins Spermatozoa Sperm medicine.anatomical_structure Culture Media Conditioned Sperm Motility Cattle Female Animal Science and Zoology Percoll |
Zdroj: | Theriogenology. 51:583-595 |
ISSN: | 0093-691X |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0093-691x(99)00012-6 |
Popis: | The effects of bovine oviductal proteins on bull sperm viability, acrosome reaction and motility were studied. Motile frozen/thawed spermatozoa from Percoll gradients were incubated with 1.0 mg/mL oviductal proteins (>8 kDa) extracted by ammonium sulphate precipitation from oviductal extract (OE) or serum-free oviductal epithelial cell-conditioned media (CM), treated in the presence (CM+) or absence (CM-) of 1 microg/mL 17beta-estradiol. Inclusion of oviductal proteins had a significant beneficial effect on sperm viability (76.3 to 80.6%+/-5.3) compared with the control (without oviductal proteins; 57.8%+/-5.3) immediately after the commencement of incubation. After 5 h, viability was significantly higher for CM- and OE treatments than for the control, although no differences were observed at 24 h. Acrosomal status only differed among treatments after 24 h, when higher percentages of acrosome- reacted spermatozoa were found in the control (46.0%+/-2.5) than in the oviductal protein treatments (33.1 to 38.2%+/-2.5). No differences in percentages of motile spermatozoa occurred within the first hour of incubation, although inclusion of CM proteins decreased sperm velocities, beat cross frequency, linearity, and straightness but increased values for mean angular displacement. These findings suggest that proteins secreted by oviductal epithelium promote viability, delay the acrosome reaction and suppress the motion of spermatozoa. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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