Abstract

Although washing of sperm cells by centrifugation is a procedure in widespread use, there have been indications that centrifugation may be harmful to the cells. The objective of this study was to develop a modified swim-up technique, without centrifugation, to get a selection of highly motile and viable ram spermatozoa free of semen plasma. Semen collected from 3 rams over a period of a year was pooled into a low, medium and high motility group, and aliquots from each pool were placed beneath a dextran solution and overlaid with medium. The top layer of the medium was collected (and replenished) 4 times at 15-min intervals. Evaluated were the pre- and post-swim-up progressive individual motility, membrane integrity and resistance to a hypoosmotic swelling test (HOS). Semen samples with initial motility < 60% showed the highest relative improvement in all 3 parameters; samples with 65 to 70 and > 70% initial motility improved less but showed final absolute values similar to those in the low motility group and to each other. The first swim-up layer had the highest contamination with semen plasma (17% beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase (NAG), 13% citric acid content) and the lowest motility score. The second, third and fourth fractions were pooled and showed low plasma contamination (2% NAG and 5% citrate), 80% motility, 70% HOS, and 72% viability, up from the pre-swim-up values of 68, 66 and 59%, respectively. Our data suggest that the dextran swim-up procedure is suitable for evaluating ram spermatozoa for in vitro and in vivo procedures in assisted reproduction.

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