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Effect of cetrorelix on sperm morphology during migration through the epididymis in the cynomolgus macaque (Macaca fascicularis)
Authors:Gago C  Soler C  Pérez-Sánchez F  Yeung C H  Cooper T G
Affiliation:Department of Animal Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of València, Spain.
Abstract:The importance of the cynomolgus monkey as a model for human reproductive medicine prompted this examination of epididymal sperm morphology. Computer-aided sperm morphological analysis was used for the first time to provide morphometric data on sperm heads as they traversed the epididymal duct of Macaca fascicularis. The duct was divided into six regions, starting close to the testis (proximal) and ending close to the vas deferens (distal). To determine the androgen-dependence of the changes, one group of animals received a GnRH-antagonist (Cetrorelix, Asta Medica, Frankfurt, Germany) to induce testicular regression and lower epididymal androgens, while a control group received only vehicle. Epididymides were removed 16 and 25 days after treatment, and sperm heads were analysed by a computer-assisted morphometric analyser. Cluster analysis revealed swollen sperm head cells in proximal regions 1 and 2 of the epididymis, but fewer such forms distally. Normal head shapes became the majority in region 4 and these underwent a gradual but statistically significant decrease in size (area, perimeter, length, width) and shape as they reached the distal regions. In the animals given Cetrorelix, sperm with swollen heads were found more distally than in the controls, although they were also never present in the distal cauda (region 6). Normal heads still became predominant in region 4 after 16 days treatment, and in region 6 after 25 days. The normal forms in the cauda epididymidis of treated animals were significantly larger than cells from control animals. We conclude that epididymal sperm maturation in the monkey is characterised by both a loss of sensitivity to distortion on air-drying, and by a decrease in sperm head size. The former, but not the latter, is attained by sperm in androgen-deficient epididymides from GnRH-antagonist-treated monkeys.
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