A new approach of sperm motility subpopulation structure in donkey and horse
Fecha
2021Autor
Gacem, Sabrina
Valverde-Abarca, Anthony
Catalán, Jaime
Yánez-Ortiz, Iván
Soler, Carles
Miró, Jordi
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
This study aimed to characterize the sperm kinematic values with high frames
per second, to define the subpopulation structure of a horse and a donkey and compare
them. A total of 57 fresh semen ejaculates (26 Spanish and 16 Arabian horse breeds and
10 donkeys) were collected and subsequently analyzed for kinematic parameters using
the Computer-aided sperm motility analysis ISAS®v1.2 system and using a Spermtrack®
10-µm depth counting chamber. Sequences were recorded at 250 frames per second,
and eight kinematic parameters were automatically evaluated. All kinematic parameters
showed significant differences between a donkey and a horse and between horse
breeds. All ejaculates evaluated showed excellent semen motility characteristics, with
significantly higher values for all kinematic parameters for donkeys compared with
horses except for beat-cross frequency. Donkey sperm was faster and linear than
the horse. Regarding horse breeds differences, the Spanish horse had higher average
path velocity, curvilinear velocity, and beat-cross frequency compared with the Arabian
horse. Spanish horse sperm was rapid, but Arab horse was more linear. The principal
component analysis showed three sperm subpopulations in the ejaculate of donkeys and
horses with a significantly different motility characteristic between them. The dominant
subpopulation for both donkey and horse was for rapid, straight, and linear with a high
beat sperm (38.2 and 41.7%, respectively), whereas the lowest subpopulation was for
the slowest and non-linear sperms. This, plus slight differences in the distribution of these
subpopulations between Arabian and Spanish horses, were found. In conclusion, higher
frames permitted to have a new interpretation of motile subpopulations with species
and breed differences. More so, future works on donkey and horse breed spermatozoa
should take into account differences between breeds that may interfere and alter the real
analysis performed.
Descripción
Frontiers in Veterinary Science, vol. 8 (May, 2021):1-9
Compartir
Métricas
Colecciones
- Artículos [26]