Abstract

BackgroundCentrifugation is routinely employed in handling the ejaculates of some species, but it is not part of the commonly used protocols in ram. However, the development and implementation of new assisted reproductive technologies, alternative preservation models based on washing sperm from a cellular ageing-accelerating substance such as the seminal plasma, and basic studies in spermatology is associated with the use of centrifugation. This requires a specific evaluation of the centrifugation protocols considering the species-specific relationship with the potential damage produced by this procedure. No previous studies have determined the effect of different centrifugation forces on ram sperm. Therefore, we aimed to assess the performance of three centrifugal forces (600×g, 3000×g, and 6000×g for 10 min at room temperature) and their effects on ram sperm motility and functionality.ResultsSperm motility and functionality parameters were assessed at 0 h and after 2 h of incubation at 37 °C. As expected, a higher cell packaging degree was obtained at high centrifugation forces (P ≤ 0.0001). Cell packaging was unstable at all centrifugal forces. Thus, there was a high cell resuspension rate after less than 2 min. Regarding sperm quality, there was a change in movement pattern of 3000×g and 6000×g centrifuged sperm after 2 h of incubation at 37 °C, characterized by an increase in rapid progressive motility, linearity, straightness, and beat frequency, and a decrease in medium progressive motility, curvilinear velocity, path velocity, and head lateral amplitude. Non-significant differences were obtained among the different treatments concerning the total viability. However, we observed a significant increase (P ≤ 0.05) in the percentage of viable apoptotic sperm in the samples centrifuged at 6000×g at 0 h.ConclusionsCentrifugal forces equal to or greater than 3000×g induced some deleterious effects in ram sperm quality, and lower forces did not provide a successful cell packaging degree.

Highlights

  • Centrifugation is routinely employed in handling the ejaculates of some species, but it is not part of the commonly used protocols in ram

  • We aimed to identify the species-specific problems of ram sperm centrifugation

  • When the subpopulation of rapid progressive sperm (RAP progressive motility (PM)) was analyzed after 2 h of incubation at 37 °C, a significantly higher percentage (P ≤ 0.05) was obtained in the samples centrifuged at the highest centrifugal forces (3000×g and 6000×g), with non-significant differences between both forces (P > 0.05) (Fig. 2c)

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Summary

Introduction

Centrifugation is routinely employed in handling the ejaculates of some species, but it is not part of the commonly used protocols in ram. The development and implementation of new assisted reproductive technologies, alternative preservation models based on washing sperm from a cellular ageing-accelerating substance such as the seminal plasma, and basic studies in spermatology is associated with the use of centrifugation. This requires a specific evaluation of the centrifugation protocols considering the species-specific relationship with the potential damage produced by this procedure. The centrifugation regime must achieve a balance between the centrifugation performance (here evaluated by cell packaging degree) and its effect on sperm quality In this sense, species specificity is very important to sperm injury caused by centrifugation [16]. Centrifugation was rejected by one study as being harmful to ram sperm [38], another study demonstrated that the final number of sperm decreased substantially by removing the supernatant after centrifugation [39]

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