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Hälsa & medicin 5.9

New technique sorts out damaged sperm to boost frozen pig breeding

Researchers have developed a magnetic sorting method that removes damaged sperm from frozen boar semen, potentially increasing viable breeding stock for the pork industry. The technique, which filters out cells with compromised membranes, could reduce waste in artificial insemination programs and improve breeding efficiency across commercial pig farms.

Originaltitel: Enrichment of thawed boar spermatozoa with an intact membrane using Magnetic Activated Cell Sorting

Abstrakt

<p>Not all boar sperm samples survive cryopreservation well. A method of eliminating damaged sperm might enable more cryopreserved boar semen to be used for pig breeding. In this study we investigated the use of Magnetic Activated Cell sorting (MACS) to eliminate damaged sperm from thawed boar semen samples. The thawed samples were mixed with Dead cell removal particles and were applied to the column in a SuperMACS II. Different fractions were collected: Original sample (O), Flow-through (FT), and Eluate (E). Sperm membrane integrity, mitochondrial membrane potential and reactive oxygen species were evaluated by flow cytometry after staining with SYBR 14 and propidium iodide, or 5 ', 6, 6 '-tetrachloro-1, 1 ', 3, 3 '-tetraethylbenzimidazolylcarbocyanine iodide, or hydroethidine and dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate, respectively. The FT samples had increased membrane integrity, a greater proportion of sperm with high mitochondrial membrane potential and a greater proportion of sperm negative for hydrogen peroxide than O samples (P&lt;0.0001), which in turn had increased membrane integrity than E samples (P &lt;0.0001). However, differences were seen between boars. The FT samples had increased values of live, superoxide positive sperm than O samples (P &lt;0.0001) and O samples had greater values than E samples (P &lt;0.0001), while there was no effect of boar. Sperm quality was best in the FT fraction, comprising approximately 32% of the sperm sample. In conclusion, although there were differences between boars, MACS separation can improve sperm quality in thawed semen samples. It would be interesting to see if this improvement is reflected in fertility outcomes.</p>

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