Journal of Andrology, Vol. 25, No. 6, November/December 2004
Copyright © American Society of Andrology
Does Seminal Plasma PSP-I/PSP-II Spermadhesin Modulate the Ability of Boar Spermatozoa to Penetrate Homologous Oocytes In Vitro?
IGNACIO CABALLERO*,
JUAN M. VAZQUEZ*,
MARIA A. GIL*,
JUAN J. CALVETE
,
JORDI ROCA*,
LIBIA SANZ
,
INMACULADA PARRILLA*,
EVA M. GARCIA*,
HERIBERTO RODRIGUEZ-MARTINEZ*,
AND
EMILIO A. MARTINEZ*
From the * Department of Medicine and Surgery,
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain;
Institute of Biomedicine, C.S.I.C., Valencia,
Spain; and
Department of Obstetrics and
Gynaecology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, Swedish
University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Uppsala, Sweden.
|
Correspondence to: Dr Vazquez, Departamento de Medicina y Cirugía
Animal, Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de Murcia, 30071 Murcia, Spain
(e-mail:
vazquez{at}um.es). |
Low concentration (0.15 mg per million of spermatozoa) of seminal
plasmaderived PSP-I/PSP-II spermadhesin heterodimer is able to preserve
the viability of highly extended boar spermatozoa. Whether spermatozoa also
keep their fertilizing capacity is not yet known. The present study evaluated
the effect of exposing freshly extended and frozen-thawed boar spermatozoa (10
million/mL) to PSP-I/PSP-II (1.5 mg/mL) for 30 or 120 minutes on sperm
characteristics and the outcome of in vitro penetration of immature (IM) and
in vitro matured (IVM) homologous oocytes, aiming to identify this
spermadhesin as a suitable modulator for sperm-handling protocols. Although
exposure to the heterodimer improved sperm viability and motility without
increasing the levels of sperm acrosome exocytosis in both freshly extended
and frozen-thawed spermatozoa, this pretreatment did not affect sperm
penetration rates or sperm numbers per oocyte when pretreated fresh
spermatozoa were coincubated with IM or IVM oocytes compared with controls.
When cryopreserved spermatozoa were tested, however, on IVM oocytes, already a
30-minute preincubation exposure to PSP-I/PSP-II showed a significant blocking
effect on penetration rate (from 90% to 32%, P < .05) and on mean sperm
numbers per oocyte (2.9 to 1.6, P < .05). To disclose the nature of this
paradox, frozen-thawed spermatozoa were cleansed (by centrifugation in saline
bovine serum albumin or through Percoll density gradient separation) and the
procedure repeated. Oocyte penetration (but not number of spermatozoa per
oocyte) increased (P < .05) when spermatozoa were cleansed with Percoll
compared with either washed or unwashed controls (53% vs 13% vs 31%,
respectively). In addition, the percentages of polyspermic oocytes remained
lower than control (38.5% vs 68.7%, respectively; P < .05). In conclusion,
the results confirm that exposure of fresh or frozen-thawed boar spermatozoa
to a low dose of seminal PSP-I/PSP-II spermadhesin preserves sperm viability
and motility in vitro. Although there was no obvious influence of the
heterodimer on the capability of freshly extended boar spermatozoa to
penetrate homologous oocytes (either IM or IVM), PSP-I/PSP-II exerted a
deleterious effect when frozen-thawed spermatozoa were used to penetrate IVM
oocytes. Such an effect of cryopreservation seems to a certain extent
reversible, since cleansing of the sperm surface decreased, at least
partially, this blocking effect, increasing both penetration and the
monospermic rates.
Key words: Seminal plasma, preservation, sperm viability, IVF, pig
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Copyright © 2004 by The American Society of Andrology.