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High pre-freezing sperm dilution improves monospermy without affecting the penetration rate in porcine IVF.

Authors :
Martinez, C.A.
Cambra, J.M.
Maside, C.
Cuello, C.
Roca, J.
Martinez, E.A.
Parrilla, I.
Gil, M.A.
Source :
Theriogenology. Jun2019, Vol. 131, p162-168. 7p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The high incidence of polyspermy is still an unresolved problem for the production of in vitro-produced porcine embryos. In this work, we modified the usual sperm processing sequence for in vitro fertilization (IVF), and the spermatozoa from four boars were frozen directly at a low sperm concentration of 20 × 106 sperm/mL (high pre-freezing sperm dilution group; F20), thawed and processed for IVF in three replicates. Spermatozoa from the same boars frozen at a conventional concentration (1000 × 106 sperm/mL) were used as the control group. The post-thaw sperm quality evaluation demonstrated that despite there being no differences in the percentage of motile spermatozoa between groups, the proportion of live spermatozoa with intact acrosomes was significantly higher in the F20 group than in the control. The in vitro penetration rate was also similar between groups; however, the co-incubation of oocytes with F20 sperm increased monospermy, IVF efficiency, cleavage rate and the efficiency of blastocyst formation compared with the results for oocytes co-incubated with control spermatozoa. These results indicate, for the first time, that a high pre-freezing sperm dilution increases monospermy without affecting penetration rates, thereby increasing blastocyst formation. • High pre-freezing sperm dilution improves monospermy maintaining high penetration rates and decreasing the boar variability. • High pre-freezing sperm dilution in porcine IVF increases blastocyst formation. • High pre-freezing sperm dilution increases percentages of live spermatozoa with intact acrosomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0093691X
Volume :
131
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Theriogenology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
136179354
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.theriogenology.2019.04.001