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Sperm quality, sperm storage and fertility in male and female Drosophila melanogaster
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Sperm function is pivotal to successful sexual reproduction. The phenotype of sperm is defined by the male’s genotype and by the environment sperm encounter during their travel to the oocyte. During their functional lifespan, sperm encounter a variety of environments: After manufacture in the testis, they are stored in males before they are ejaculated along with seminal fluids and transferred to and stored in females for hours up to years before getting a chance to fertilise an egg. The sperm environment in male and female reproductive tract will be determined by male and female genotype, but also by environmental factors that affect sperm directly or indirectly by altering male and female condition. Like somatic cells, sperm age and decline in function over time due to the accumulation of cellular damage. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) that emerge as a by-product of aerobic metabolism and environmental stress are believed to be the main cause of cell senescence. Spermatozoa are in particular susceptible to ROSinduced damage because they have only limited defence and repair mechanism. As it contains many polyunsaturated fatty acids, the sperm membrane is especially prone to peroxidation by ROS and can consequently become leaky. The condition of the sperm membrane can hence be used to assess sperm age. Sperm quality has frequently been measured as sperm viability even though this approach has several biological and technical pitfalls. I developed an osmotic sperm stress test to assess sperm quality and predict future sperm performance that circumvents several of these pitfalls. Further, using osmotic stress to challenge the sperm membrane and observing sperm viability in a longitudinal approach is probably more meaningful in predicting future sperm performance than sperm viability per se. An essential abiotic factor that affects sperm directly and indirectly during storage in males and females is temperature. Ectotherms that inhabit different climates like D. melanoga
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1375408528
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource