Author:
Lewin L. M.,Fournier-Delpech S.,Weissenberg R.,Golan R.,Cooper T.,Pholpramool C.,Shochat L.
Abstract
In this study, administration of pivalic acid or its sodium salt was found to
decrease the L-carnitine concentration in the epididymal lumen of the hamster;
it also tested whether this decrease affected sperm cell motility, chromatin
structure, or fertilizing capacity. Provision of pivalic acid or its sodium
salt (20 mM or 40 mM) in the drinking water of mature male golden hamsters for
30 days reduced (by 72%, 75%, and 83% in three
experiments) the L-carnitine concentration of the cauda epididymidis but did
not inhibit sperm chromatin condensation, as assessed by flow cytometry. The
treatments did not alter the location of motile sperm in the epididymidis nor
did they appreciably affect the motility of sperm obtained from the distal
cauda epididymidis. The numbers and percentage of ova that reached the 2-cell
stage 36–40 h after uterine insemination with spermatozoa from control
and treated hamsters served as a measure of sperm fertility. Treatment with
pivalic acid or sodium pivalate did not render male hamsters infertile
although it appeared to reduce the fertilizing ability of their spermatozoa.
These results suggest that the high concentration of L-carnitine present in
the lumen of the cauda epididymidis is not required for maturation of sperm
chromatin or development of sperm motility.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
13 articles.
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