Abstract
In a liquid environment, at high dilutions, fertility of bull sperm is
maintained for 3–5 days when stored at ambient temperatures
(10–21°C), after which time it steadily declines at a rate of
3–6% per day. This decline in fertility occurs irrespective of
whether the sperm are stored at 5°C or at 15°C, but the rate is
greater once storage temperatures exceed 25°C. Sperm motility can be
maintained for extended periods in an environment where the extracellular
oxidative stress is minimized by reducing the oxygen tension, by addition of
antioxidants and chelating agents; however, this will not prevent a
significant drop in fertility after five days of storage at ambient
temperature. The requirement of energy by the sperm-motility apparatus demands
a high level of respiratory activity. This system is very active and the free
radicals produced in vivo during this process could lead to chromatin damage.
As no internal repair mechanism exists in sperm, an extraneous supply of
protectants, or an environment where damage is minimized, is essential to
maintain its fertilizing potential. The lack of extended storage potential of
sperm, even in the presence of antioxidants, seems to suggest that although
oocyte-penetrating ability of the sperm could still be intact, the high rate
of intracellular metabolic activity could lead to mitochondrial DNA damage and
chromosomal abnormalities that would compromise the viability of the resulting
conceptus.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
136 articles.
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