Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10892396 | Theriogenology | 2013 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Prognostic relations between sperm variables and sire fertility are yet elusive. A retrospective analysis of sperm morphology and chromatin stability (studied using sperm chromatin structure assay [SCSA]) and their relation to fertility after AI (as proportions of 60 days of nonreturn to estrous [NRR], corrected NRR, or calving rate) was studied with preselected frozen semen doses from a group (N = 43) of AI-sires of the Finnish Ayrshire breed composed of 50% subfertile bulls (<55% NRR) and 50% fertile sires (>55%Â NRR). Fertility, indicated by all three parameters, correlated significantly only with the percentage of morphologically normal spermatozoa, a variable which negatively correlated with the percentage of DNA fragmentation at the time of SCSA, thus confirming the value of always having high numbers of morphologically normal spermatozoa in AI-doses. Proportions of major sperm defects also related to fertility but only when considering corrected NRR, not with calving rate, indicating that proportions of normal spermatozoa, a value surpassing differences between sperm laboratory screening methods, might be valuable and could be easily made routine by the industry. Though SCSA as a method is being contested for DNA- and chromatin analyses in the light of epigenetic changes, a particular parameter, the High Green fluorescence, showed the highest values for sperm doses collected from bulls having meiotic problems and containing a high proportion of diploid spermatozoa (approximately 20%) and also in bulls having a reciprocal chromosomal translocation, thus suggesting such a parameter might be useable to discriminate which bulls ought to be studied in more detail, including cytogenetic analyses.
Keywords
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Animal Science and Zoology
Authors
S. Nagy, A. Johannisson, T. Wahlsten, R. Ijäs, M. Andersson, H. Rodriguez-Martinez,