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Influence of seminal plasma on fresh and post-thaw parameters of stallion epididymal spermatozoa
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Influence of seminal plasma on fresh and post-thaw parameters of stallion epididymal spermatozoa

A. Heise, P. N. Thompson, D. Gerber and Annett Annandale
Animal reproduction science, Vol.123(3-4), pp.192-201
2011
PMID: 21256684

Abstract

Agriculture Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science Life Sciences & Biomedicine Reproductive Biology Science & Technology Veterinary Sciences
Fresh and post-thaw parameters (motility, morphology and viability) of stallion epididymal spermatozoa that have been and have not been exposed to seminal plasma were evaluated, and directly compared to fresh and post-thaw parameters of ejaculated spermatozoa. Six sperm categories of each stallion (n = 4) were evaluated for motility, morphology and viability. These categories were fresh ejaculated spermatozoa (Fr-E), fresh epididymal spermatozoa that had been exposed to seminal plasma (Fr-SP+), fresh epididymal spermatozoa that had never been exposed to seminal plasma (Fr-SP-), frozen-thawed ejaculated spermatozoa (Cr-E), frozen-thawed epididymal spermatozoa that had been exposed to seminal plasma prior to freezing (Cr-SP+) and frozen-thawed epididymal spermatozoa that had never been exposed to seminal plasma (Cr-SP-). Results show that seminal plasma stimulates initial motility of fresh epididymal stallion spermatozoa while this difference in progressive motility is no longer present post-thaw; and that progressive motility of fresh or frozen-thawed ejaculated stallion spermatozoa is not always a good indicator for post-thaw progressive motility of epididymal spermatozoa. This study shows that seminal plasma has a positive influence on the incidence of overall sperm defects, midpiece reflexes and distal cytoplasmic droplets in frozen-thawed stallion epididymal spermatozoa while the occurance of midpiece reflexes is likely to be linked to distal cytoplasmic droplets. Furthermore, seminal plasma does not have an influence on viability of fresh and frozen-thawed morphologically normal epididymal spermatozoa. We recommend the retrograde flushing technique using seminal plasma as flushing medium to harvest and freeze stallion epididymal spermatozoa.

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Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.81 Reproductive Biology
1.81.176 Male Fertility
Web Of Science research areas
Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science
Reproductive Biology
Veterinary Sciences
ESI research areas
Plant & Animal Science
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