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1.
Simple histochemical stain for acrosomes on sperm from several species   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The acrosome reaction is an exocytotic process that enables a sperm to penetrate the zona pellucida and fertilize an egg. The process involves the fenestration and vesiculation of the sperm plasma membrane and outer acrosomal membrane releasing the acro somal contents. Many different methods have been devel oped to detect the acrosomal status of sperm. These techniques are sometimes complicated, costly, and can be used on only a few species. The aim of this study was to develop an efficient and inexpensive method to assess the acrosomal status of sperm from a variety of species. We prepared and fixed sperm from humans, cattle, swine, rabbits, guinea pigs, and mice and stained them with Coomassie G250. The acrosomes were stained intensely blue in color. Following capacitation, some sperm were incubated for 1 hr with 10 microM calcium ionophore A23187 to induce the acrosome reaction. They were also stained with Coomassie G-250. Ionophore-treated sperm lacked Coomassie staining over the acrosomal region. Differential interference contrast (DIC), bright field microscopy or Pisum sativum agglutinin staining confirmed that the acrosomes of sperm from these species were reacted in response to calcium ionophore treatment and the acrosome reaction frequencies matched results with Coomassie staining. These results demonstrate that the acrosomal status of mammalian sperm from several species can be determined easily and reliably using this simple Coomassie Blue G-250 staining method.  相似文献   

2.
Determination of the percentage of live cells with intact acrosomes and no morphologic aberrations could be a practical index of semen quality. We applied viability and acrosome staining techniques, originally described for bull, boar and rabbit sperm, to mouse spermatozoa. The viability stain was either trypan blue or Congo red. The stain was precipitated by neutral red in the fixative. The acrosome was stained by Giemsa. Sperm morphology, including cytoplasmic droplets, could be evaluated as well. The staining method described here is a useful routine tool for simultaneous evaluation of the plasma membrane integrity of different sperm subdomains, the status of the acrosome, and cellular morphology.  相似文献   

3.
A simple dual staining procedure for detecting the true acrosome reaction in dried smears of buffalo spermatozoa is described. Trypan blue is used first to differentiate live from dead spermatozoa and the dried smears which have been prepared are stained with Giemsa for acrosome evaluation. Four categories of spermatozoa were recognized: A) live, intact acrosome (acrosome pink, postnuclear cap clear); B) dead, intact acrosome (acrosome pink, postnuclear cap blue); C) live, detached acrosome (acrosome clear, postnuclear cap clear); and D) dead, detached acrosome (acrosome clear, postnuclear cap blue). The procedure is simple, rapid and convenient for assessing true acrosome reaction in buffalo spermatozoa. Simultaneous assessment of sperm viability and its acrosomal status in dried smears makes this procedure attractive because the true acrosome reaction can be studied thoroughly at a later state after the incubation period.  相似文献   

4.
During routine evaluation of trypan blue-Giemsa stained semen smears, sperm cells can be found with unstained heads and with stained tails. It was hypothesized that these cells were immotile and should not be considered as live. Sperm motility was determined in isoosmotic, and presumably isotonic trypan blue-stained wet preparations. Bull, ram and boar semen smears were stained with hypoosmotic trypan blue-Giemsa to compare the relationship between the percentage of stained sperm tails and the percentage of sperm tails remaining straight under hypoosmotic conditions. Actively moving spermatozoa with unstained heads, but with stained tails were never observed in wet preparations. The correlation coefficient found between the percentage of sperm with stained tails and the percentage with straight tails was 0.81, 0.94 and 0.85 for bull, ram and boar spermatozoa, respectively. Results of this study show that sperm cells with an intact head membrane, but a stained and presumably membrane-damaged tail are not motile. Therefore these cells should be included in the dead category rather than alive in the usual live-dead studies with vital stains.  相似文献   

5.
A simple trypan blue-neutral red-Giemsa staining procedure for simultaneous evaluation of acrosome, sperm head, and tail membrane integrity and morphology has been used to evaluate equine spermatozoa. Some special characteristics and problems have arisen in evaluating stallion semen. One problem was the differentiation of intact vs. damaged sperm tails primarily in frozen and thawed samples. After freezing and thawing, a high percentage of spermatozoa with an unstained head and stained tail were observed. These cells are considered immotile. Therefore, unambiguous differentiation of intact vs. damaged sperm tail membrane is very important for evaluating semen quality. The aim of our study was to develop a method especially for stallion sperm to distinguish more accurately the different cell types. We compared Chicago sky blue 6B (CSB) to trypan blue (TB) for viability staining. CSB/Giemsa staining showed good repeatability and agreement with TB/Giemsa measurements. For densitometry analysis, individual digital images were taken from smears stained by CSB/Giemsa and by TB/Giemsa. A red-green-blue (RGB) histogram for each area of spermatozoa was drawn. Differences of means of RGB values of live vs. dead tails and separate live vs. dead heads from each photo were used to compare the two staining procedures. CSB produced similar live/dead sperm head differentiation and better tail differentiation. TB can be replaced by CSB and this results in more reliable evaluation. After staining with 0.16% CSB and 4 min fixation, 2–4 h Giemsa staining at 25–40° C is recommended for stallion semen.  相似文献   

6.
A simple trypan blue-neutral red-Giemsa staining procedure for simultaneous evaluation of acrosome, sperm head, and tail membrane integrity and morphology has been used to evaluate equine spermatozoa. Some special characteristics and problems have arisen in evaluating stallion semen. One problem was the differentiation of intact vs. damaged sperm tails primarily in frozen and thawed samples. After freezing and thawing, a high percentage of spermatozoa with an unstained head and stained tail were observed. These cells are considered immotile. Therefore, unambiguous differentiation of intact vs. damaged sperm tail membrane is very important for evaluating semen quality. The aim of our study was to develop a method especially for stallion sperm to distinguish more accurately the different cell types. We compared Chicago sky blue 6B (CSB) to trypan blue (TB) for viability staining. CSB/Giemsa staining showed good repeatability and agreement with TB/Giemsa measurements. For densitometry analysis, individual digital images were taken from smears stained by CSB/Giemsa and by TB/Giemsa. A red-green-blue (RGB) histogram for each area of spermatozoa was drawn. Differences of means of RGB values of live vs. dead tails and separate live vs. dead heads from each photo were used to compare the two staining procedures. CSB produced similar live/dead sperm head differentiation and better tail differentiation. TB can be replaced by CSB and this results in more reliable evaluation. After staining with 0.16% CSB and 4 min fixation, 2-4 h Giemsa staining at 25-40° C is recommended for stallion semen.  相似文献   

7.
A simple trypan blue-neutral red-Giemsa staining procedure for simultaneous evaluation of acrosome, sperm head, and tail membrane integrity and morphology has been used to evaluate equine spermatozoa. Some special characteristics and problems have arisen in evaluating stallion semen. One problem was the differentiation of intact vs. damaged sperm tails primarily in frozen and thawed samples. After freezing and thawing, a high percentage of spermatozoa with an unstained head and stained tail were observed. These cells are considered immotile. Therefore, unambiguous differentiation of intact vs. damaged sperm tail membrane is very important for evaluating semen quality. The aim of our study was to develop a method especially for stallion sperm to distinguish more accurately the different cell types. We compared Chicago sky blue 6B (CSB) to trypan blue (TB) for viability staining. CSB/Giemsa staining showed good repeatability and agreement with TB/Giemsa measurements. For densitometry analysis, individual digital images were taken from smears stained by CSB/Giemsa and by TB/Giemsa. A red-green-blue (RGB) histogram for each area of spermatozoa was drawn. Differences of means of RGB values of live vs. dead tails and separate live vs. dead heads from each photo were used to compare the two staining procedures. CSB produced similar live/dead sperm head differentiation and better tail differentiation. TB can be replaced by CSB and this results in more reliable evaluation. After staining with 0.16% CSB and 4 min fixation, 2-4 h Giemsa staining at 25-40 degrees C is recommended for stallion semen.  相似文献   

8.
Distribution of glycocompounds in human spermatozoa was studied by using fluorescent lectin-conjugates. Con A bound predominantly to acrosomal and posterior head regions whereas RCA I bound to the acrosomal region of intact spermatozoa, stained in suspension. Other lectins used (LCA, WGA, SBA, PNA) stained the the entire sperm surface. In airdried sperm smears binding of both Con A and RCA I were identical with the staining pattern obtained with living cells whereas LCA, WGA, SBA and PNA now bound heavily into acrosomal region. As a similar staining pattern was obtained with permeabilized sperm cells, this staining is apparently due to binding to intracellular structures. The efficiency of Lens culinaris agglutinin affinity chromatography in purification of human sperm glycoproteins was tested after their external radiolabelling with the neuraminidase/galactose oxidase/sodium borohydride method. 22% of applicated radioactivity could be eluted from the column with the specific inhibitory saccharide, and most of the radiolabelled surface glycoproteins of the whole sperm lysate, were also present in the LCA affinity column eluate. LCA affinity chromatography seems thus be an effective method to enrich membrane glycoproteins of human spermatozoa.  相似文献   

9.
Berger T 《Theriogenology》1990,33(3):689-695
Fluorescein isothiocyanate-labelled pisum sativum agglutinin (FITC-PSA) was evaluated as an acrosomal stain for porcine and caprine sperm that had previously been stained with Hoechst 33258 to assess cell viability. The FITC-PSA procedure was as accurate as other procedures in assessing acrosomal presence or absence on either fresh or liquid-stored porcine sperm. Approximately half of the incubated porcine sperm with acrosomal loss maintained membrane impermeability to the Hoechst 33258; these were potentially viable acrosome-reacted sperm. The FITC-PSA procedure was significantly correlated with the assessment of acrosomal status of cryopreserved caprine sperm by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). However, TEM results indicated a higher percentage of caprine sperm with acrosomal loss. Ability to penetrate zona-free hamster ova was not highly correlated with the percentage of viable acrosome-reacted porcine or caprine sperm. The FITC-PSA procedure provides an estimate of viable acrosome reactions and may be a useful tool in the evaluation of sperm fertility.  相似文献   

10.
The aim of this study was to develop a new method that allows morphometric assessment of the sperm nucleus and acrosome in the ram using fluorescence microscopy and free software. The study was divided into three experiments. In the first experiment, semen smears from 20 ejaculates were fixed and labeled with a propidium iodide–pisum sativum agglutinin (PI/PSA) combination. Digital images of the sperm nucleus, acrosome, and whole sperm head were captured and analyzed using the ImageJ program. The computer-assisted sperm morphometry analysis fluorescence (CASMA-F) method used allowed the differentiation, capture, and morphometric analysis of most sperm nuclei, acrosomes, and whole heads with high precision and the assessment of the acrosomal status. In the second experiment, sperm nuclear morphometry by CASMA-F was compared by staining with the PI/PSA combination and staining with Hoechst 33342 as in previous studies. Similar results were obtained using both methods. In the third experiment, CASMA-F with PI/PSA was compared with a more conventional CASMA method (semen smears stained with Hemacolor (HEM) and processed with the ISAS commercial software, HEM). Spermatozoa displayed a bigger size when processed with CASMA-F than with HEM method in all primary sperm head morphometric parameters, but results using both methods were correlated. It was concluded that the CASMA-F method allows the simultaneous assessment of sperm nucleus, acrosome, and head in the ram.  相似文献   

11.
A novel stain for evaluating the acrosomes of bovine spermatozoa was investigated. Acrosome reactions were induced by incubating spermatozoa enriched by swim-up with 1 mumol/l calcium ionophore A23187 for 1 or 1.5 h, while control samples were incubated in modified Tyrode's medium alone. After fixing in formaldehyde, spermatozoa were stained either with naphthol yellow S plus erythrosin B (NE) or with the novel stain, naphthol yellow S plus aniline blue (NA). The number of spermatozoa that had undergone acrosome reaction was counted and compared with results obtained using differential interference contrast microscopy (DIC). The correlation between the 2 staining methods was high (r=0.99), as was the correlation between NA staining and DIC (r=0.97). Slides stained with NA showed little background staining and the preparations were permanent. The results indicate that NA may be a useful stain for the bright-field evaluation of the bovine acrosome.  相似文献   

12.
Changes in the plasma membrane of bovine sperm during heparin-induced capacitation were detected by the binding of fluorescent labeled lectins to unfixed sperm. Of the seven lectins evaluated, only binding of wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) changed with capacitation. Sperm were classified into one of 5 patterns (p1–p5) based on staining with WGA, presence or absence of propidium iodide (PI) staining (dead or alive), and acrosomal integrity (acrosome intact or reacted). The major changes associated with capacitation occurred in p1 and p2. Sperm in p1 exhibited diffuse WGA binding over the anterior sperm head, were alive, and had intact acrosomes. In p2, sperm were also acrosome intact and alive, but lacked WGA binding. When sperm were incubated under capacitating conditions with heparin, there was a decrease over time in the percentage of sperm classified in p1 (p < 0.05) and an increase in the percentage of sperm in p2 (p < 0.05). When capacitation by heparin was delayed by the inclusion of glucose in the culture medium, the same heparin-dependent changes in the percentage of sperm in p1 and p2 were delayed (p < 0.05). When capacitation by heparin was inhibited by including protamine in the culture medium, the percentage of sperm in p1 or p2 was not different from sperm incubated without heparin. Heparin-induced capacitation was associated with a loss of WGA binding to the bovine sperm head. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Air-dried smears of saline suspensions of mammalian spermatozoa were stained for 10-60 min at room temperature in a mixture of eosin Y, fast green FCF, and naphthol yellow S (0.1% w/v, each dye) in 1.0% aqueous acetic acid. They were then blotted, rinsed in 1.0% acetic acid until no more dye was removed (0.5-1.5 min), blotted and allowed to dry completely, rinsed in xylene and mounted in synthetic resin. In all species examined except the rat, acrosomes were stained greenish blue to bluish green or blue depending on their thickness; in the rat, they displayed more affinity for eosin and were reddish. In all species, spermatozoan nuclei were strongly stained by naphthol yellow. In intact sperm heads, postnuclear cap had a yellowish green appearance. Midpieces of rodent spermatozoa, especially those of younger gametes, were stained bright red while those of ejaculated bull and rabbit spermatozoa were stained blue-green. Cytoplasmic droplets associated with rodent spermatozoa were consistently stained a dark green. In all species, the remainder of the flagellum generally was stained bluish to blue-black. Deductions concerning the morphology of spermatozoa derived from the staining experiments were verified by means of scanning electron microscopy. Because it provides reliable information concerning the morphology of the various components of mammalian spermatozoa, this simple staining procedure should prove applicable to a wide variety of studies involving the morphology of intact spermatozoa  相似文献   

14.
Frozen semen from a control bull (C: 89% morphologically normal sperm) and two bulls with acrosomal defects (K1: 92% flattened acrosomes; K2: 82% indented acrosomes) were used to investigate the fertilizing ability of bull sperm with flattened or indented acrosomes. In experiment 1, frozen-thawed sperm were evaluated for acrosomal integrity with fluorescent microscopy. In experiment 2, proteolytic activity of the acrosomal contents of sperm was evaluated through a gelatin digestion assay. In experiment 3, an IVF test system was used to determine the ability of sperm with flattened or indented acrosomes to bind to bovine oocytes and penetrate the zona pellucida. In experiment 4, IVM zona-free bovine oocytes (ZFO) were fertilized and examined to evaluate sperm chromatin decondensation. In experiment 1, bulls K1 and K2 had a lower proportion of sperm with intact acrosomes (0 and 13.6 +/- 4.5%, respectively) than bull C (30.2 +/- 5.6%) after 2h of incubation. In experiment 2, the proportion of sperm with proteolytic activity, as indicated by gelatin digestion around sperm heads, did not differ among bulls (C: 55%, n=410; K1: 43%, n=426; K2: 48%, n=324). In experiment 3, a lower proportion of sperm with flattened (K1) or indented acrosomes (K2) bound to oocytes than sperm from the control bull, C. The percentage of zona penetrated (55%, n=20; 13%, n=23; 4%, n=25) and the mean (+/- S.E.M.) number of sperm penetrating these zona pellucida (19.7 +/- 2.5; 6.9 +/- 1.0; and 2.6 +/- 0.5) was higher (P<0.05) for bull C than for bulls K1 or K2, respectively. In experiment 4, the percentage of ZFO penetrated (95%, n=20; 52%, n=30; 30%, n=33) and the mean (+/- S.E.M.) number of sperm with chromatin decondensation (7.8 +/- 1.6; 0.8 +/- 0.2; and 0.3 +/- 0.1) were also higher (P<0.05) for the control bull, C than for bulls K1 or K2, respectively. Results suggest that although sperm with the flattened or indented acrosomes had a tendency to undergo spontaneous acrosome reaction on incubation after thawing, the proteolytic activity of the acrosomal contents appeared to be normal. Sperm with the flattened or indented acrosomes also appeared to have a reduced ability to fuse with oolemma as demonstrated by confocal microscopy. This would impair the ability to penetrate ooplasm and undergo sperm chromatin decondensation.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of our study was to estimate the viability of cat epididymal sperm in short time storage at +4 degrees C and in long term storage at -196 degrees C and to assess the percentage of live sperm in fresh semen using eosin/nigrosin staining compared to the flow cytometry method. The testes with epididymides were obtained after routine castration procedure. The sperm for further research were collected after flushing the epididymides using extender consist of: Tris 2.4 g, citric acid 1.4 g, glucose 0.8 g, 0.06% (w/v) Na-benzylpenicillin, 0.1% (w/v) streptomycin sulphate and distilled water. Half of each sample was equilibrated with the dilution and loaded in 0.25 ml plastic straws. The straws were placed on a rack in liquid nitrogen vapour at -120 degrees C for 10 min, plunged in liquid nitrogen for 10 min, replaced to marked goblets and loaded into canes for long term storage in liquid nitrogen at -196 degrees C. Sixty percent of motile spermatozoa was accomplished after thawing. However, the percentage of the sperm with intact acrosomes was decreased and the share of cells with midpiece and tail defects was increased. The storage of sperm flushed from epididymides at +4 degrees C for a short time and the usage of sperm during 2-3 days after collection seems to be better than cryopreservation. In our study, normospermia was present in 72.7 +/- 8.8% of fresh semen. The most common defect was the presence of distal droplets, imperfect heads or abnormal acrosomal outline. The motility of fresh sperm flushed from epididymides achieved 77.9 +/- 6.8%. The viability of sperm amounting to 52.5 +/- 13.8% was achieved on third day of conservation in the liquid extender. The percentage of viable sperm in fresh epididymal spermatozoa was 84.9 +/- 7.8%. Compared to these results, the percentage of live cells using SYBR-14/propidium iodide staining was insignificantly lower (82.2 +/- 8%). The live, non-apoptotic cells were 79.0 +/- 7.8%. The share of live, early-apoptotic spermatozoa and late-apoptotic spermatozoa was, respectively, 2 +/- 1.4% and 1.5 +/- 0.9%. The viability of sperm estimated by eosin/nigrosin staining was confirmed by the flow cytometry method. There was no statistical differences between the staining. The usage of apoptosis detection kit revealed, that the percentage of early-apoptotic and late-apoptotic cells was insignificant.  相似文献   

16.
Freeze-thawing cat sperm in cryoprotectant results in extensive membrane damage. To determine whether cooling alone influences sperm structure and viability, we compared the effect of cooling rate on sperm from normospermic (N; > 60% normal sperm per ejaculate) and teratospermic (T; < 40% normal sperm per ejaculate) domestic cats. Electroejaculates were divided into raw or washed (Ham's F-10 + 5% fetal calf serum) aliquots, with the latter resuspended in Ham's F-10 medium or Platz Diluent Variant Filtered without glycerol (20% egg yolk, 11% lactose). Aliquots were 1) maintained at 25 degrees C (no cooling; control), 2) cooled to 5 degrees C in a commercial refrigerator for 30 min (rapid cooling; approximately 4 degrees C/min), 3) placed in an ice slush at 0 degrees C for 10 min (ultrarapid cooling; approximately 14 degrees C/min), or 4) cooled to 0 degrees C at 0.5 degrees C/min in a programmable alcohol bath (slow cooling); and aliquots were removed every 4 degrees C. All samples then were warmed to 25 degrees C and evaluated for percentage sperm motility and the proportion of intact acrosomes using a fluorescein-conjugated peanut agglutinin stain. In both cat populations, sperm percentage motility remained unaffected (p > 0.05) immediately after exposure to low temperatures and after warming to 25 degrees C. However, the proportion of spermatozoa with intact acrosomes declined (p < 0.05) after rapid cooling ( approximately 4 degrees C/min) to 5 degrees C (N, 65.6%; T, 27.5%) or ultrarapid cooling ( approximately 14 degrees C/min) to 0 degrees C (N, 62.1%; T, 23.0%) in comparison to the control value (N, 81.5%; T, 77.5%). Transmission electron microscopy of cooled sperm revealed extensive damage to acrosomal membranes. In contrast, slow cooling (0.5 degrees C/min) to 5 degrees C maintained (p > 0.05) a high proportion of spermatozoa with intact acrosomes (N, 75.5%; T, 68.3%), which also remained similar (p > 0.05) between cat populations (N, 64.7%; T, 56.8%) through continued cooling to 0 degrees C. Results demonstrate that 1) rapid cooling of domestic cat sperm induces significant acrosomal damage without altering sperm motility, 2) spermatozoa from teratospermic males are more susceptible to cold-induced acrosomal damage than normospermic counterparts, and 3) reducing the rate of initial cooling markedly decreases sperm structural damage.  相似文献   

17.
Three experiments were conducted to examine the effects of incubating porcine spermatozoa in concentrated samples, to determine the viability of sperm encapsulated in microspheres and to evaluate the potential of microencapsulating porcine spermatozoa for use in artificial insemination. In Experiment 1, sperm incubated at 4, 15, 20 or 37 degrees C and at concentrations of 7.5, 15, 30, 60 or 120 x 10(6) sperm/ml lost motility over a 16-h incubation period. Sperm motility was significantly lower at 4 degrees C than at 15, 20 or 37 degrees C and was significantly higher in more concentrated samples. In Experiment 2, sperm were encapsulated in poly-lysine microspheres at concentrations of 30, 60 or 120 x 10(6) sperm/ml and incubated in vitro at 4, 15 or 20 degrees C. Unencapsulated samples were incubated at similar concentrations and temperatures and served as controls. Motility and percentage of sperm with intact acrosomes were estimated at 2, 4, 8 and 16 h of incubation. The procedure of encapsulation did not affect sperm motility or acrosomal morphology; however, there was an accelerated loss of motility in encapsulated samples. There were no differences in acrosomal morphology between the two groups across time. In Experiment 3, sperm were encapsulated at a concentration of 120 x 10(6) sperm/ml and 20 ml of capsules were inseminated into estrous sows. Uterine contents were flushed at 3, 6 and 24 h after insemination and examined for capsules. Capsules containing motile sperm were recovered from sows at 3 and 6 h, but not at 24 h. These results demonstrate that porcine spermatozoa can be encapsulated in microspheres and that these capsules can be inseminated into estrous females, but the sperm undergo an accelerated loss of motility in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
Aboagla EM  Terada T 《Theriogenology》2004,62(6):1160-1172
Four experiments were conducted to investigate the effects of egg yolk during the freezing step of cryopreservation (namely, the process except for the cooling step), on the viability of goat spermatozoa. The effects of egg yolk on sperm motility and acrosome integrity during the freezing step were investigated in Experiment 1. Spermatozoa diluted with Tris-citric acid-glucose (TCG) solution containing 20% (v/v) egg yolk were cooled to 5 degrees C, washed, and then frozen in TCG with egg yolk (TCG-Y), TCG without egg yolk (TGG-NY), 0.370 M trehalose with egg yolk (TH-Y), or trehalose without egg yolk (TH-NY). All extenders contained glycerol. In frozen-thawed spermatozoa, the inclusion of egg yolk in the freezing extenders increased (P<0.05) percentages of motile sperm, progressively motile sperm, and the recovery rate (ratio of post-thaw to pre-freeze values), but decreased (P<0.05) acrosomal integrity. Moreover, extenders with trehalose had better (P<0.05) post-thaw sperm viability. In Experiment 2, the effects of egg yolk on acrosome status before and after freezing were studied. Egg yolk significantly decreased the proportion of intact acrosomes before freezing, leading to fewer (P<0.05) intact acrosomes post-thaw and lower (P<0.05) recovery rates for intact acrosomes. In Experiment 3, including sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) in a diluent containing egg yolk tended to preserve the acrosome compared with the egg yolk containing diluent free of SDS, however, spermatozoa had a lower (P<0.05) proportion of intact acrosomes than those in a yolk-free diluent. However, after cooling, spermatozoa were diluted with a glycerolated extender containing egg yolk. Therefore, the objective of Experiment 4 was to explore whether the egg yolk or glycerol was responsible for the reduced intact acrosome percentage. In this experiment, after cooling and washing the spermatozoa were diluted in TCG with glycerol and/or egg yolk. The combination of glycerol and egg yolk in the extender reduced (P<0.05) the proportion of intact acrosomes compared with egg yolk or glycerol alone. In conclusion, the inclusion of egg yolk significantly improved sperm motility, indicating its beneficial effects during the freezing step of cryopreservation; trehalose appeared to synergistically increase its cryoprotective effects. Furthermore, although neither glycerol nor egg yolk per se affected the proportion of intact acrosomes, the combination of the two significantly reduced the proportion of acrosome-intact spermatozoa.  相似文献   

19.
Cryopreservation of Vervet monkey semen caused a highly significant reduction in the percentage of normal acrosomes and a highly significant increase in the percentage of mildly damaged, severely damaged, and lost acrosomes. This was demonstrated by staining ten post-thaw semen samples, which enabled a visualization of the acrosomal damage. The incidence of post-thaw intact acrosomes in this cryopreservation method was found to be similar to that reported for man and cynomolgus monkey semen.  相似文献   

20.
The localization of ubiquitin (UB) signals in the acrosomes of rat spermiogenic cells was investigated by immunoelectron microscopy using two anti-UB antibodies: UB1, reacting with ubiquitinated proteins and free UB; and FK1, recognizing polyubiquitinated proteins but not monoubiquitinated proteins or free UB. Labeling of UB by UB1 (UB1 signal) was detected in the acrosomes at any stage of differentiation. In step 1 spermatids, UB1 signals were detected on the cytoplasmic surface and in the matrix of transport vesicles located between the trans-Golgi network and the acrosome. Weak signals were detected in acrosomal granules within acrosome vesicles that had not yet attached to the nucleus. In step 4-5 spermatids, the acrosome vesicles had enlarged and attached to the nucleus. Strong gold labeling was noted in a narrow space between the outer acrosomal membrane and the developing acrosomal granule, where a dense fibrous material was observed on routine electron microscopy, whereas the acrosomal granule was weakly stained by UB1 antibody. In step 6-8 spermatids, UB1 signals were detected in the fibrous material that expanded laterally to form a narrow electronless dense zone between the acrosomal granule and the outer acrosomal membrane. Labeling in the acrosomal granule increased. In step 9-11 spermatids, UB1 signals were confined to the narrow zone from the tip of the head to the periphery of the ventral fin. The matrix of the acrosome was weakly stained. In epididymal sperm, UB1 labeling in the acrosome decreased without any pretreatment, whereas staining was noted in a spot in the neck region and in the dorsal fin after trypsin digestion. On the other hand, the staining pattern with FK1 was quite different from that with UB1. The trans-Golgi network was weakly stained but the cis-Golgi network was strongly stained. The dense fibrous material just beneath the outer membrane was never stained with FK1. The results suggest that UB on the surface of transport vesicles is involved in anterograde transport from the Golgi apparatus to the acrosome. The physiological role of UB in acrosomes is not clear. Two candidates for monoubiquitinated proteins in the acrosome, which have a UB-interacting motif, were found by cyber screening.  相似文献   

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