Published October 12, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

DNA fragmentation in epididymal freeze-dried ram spermatozoa impairs embryo development

  • 1. Luca
  • 2. Jamie
  • 3. Debora A.
  • 4. Pasqualino
  • 5. Joseph

Description

Sperm freeze-drying is a revolutionary technique, which has been gaining prominence in recent years. The first related significant result was Wakayama and Yanagimachi’s demonstration in 1998 of the birth of healthy mouse offspring by Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI), using epididymal freeze-dried spermatozoa. Mouse, rat, and hamster models were the first small mammals born from lyophilized epididymal spermatozoa, whereas most other studies in this field used ejaculated spermatozoa. In this work, we applied this technique to ram epididymal spermatozoa, checking the correlation between DNA integrity and embryo development following ICSI. To do this, epididymal sperm from four rams was lyophilized in a trehalose, glucose, KCl, HEPES, and Trolox media. To evaluate DNA damage and fragmentation after rehydration, samples were processed for Sperm Chromatin Dispersion test (SCD), Two-Tailed Comet Assay, and were used for ICSI. Ram #2 had a higher rate of spermatozoa with intact DNA compared with rams #1, #3, and #4 (28% vs. 3.8%, 2.8%, and 5%, respectively) and the lowest rate of Single-Strand Breaks (SSBs) (70% vs. 95.9%, 92.6%, and 93% respectively). Ram #3 had a higher level of Double-Strand Breaks (DSBs) compared to Ram #1 (4.6% vs. 0.33%, respectively). Embryo development to the blastocyst stage following ICSI was only reached from rams whose sperm had higher level of intact DNA – Rams #2 and #4 (6%, 5/147 and 6.3%, 4/64, respectively). Definitively, the impact of sperm DNA damage on embryonic development depends on the balance between sperm DNA fragmentation extent, fragmentation type (SSBs or DSBs), and the oocyte’s repair capacity.

Notes

This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions grant agreements No. 734434 and No. 749537, and under Twinning grant agreement No. 692185. Moreover, this investigation was part of experimental protocols conducted under the research projects BFU-2013-44290-R and RTC-2016-4733-1 of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO). The authors also participate in the COST Action (CA16119).

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Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1016/j.theriogenology.2018.11.027 (DOI)
Is new version of
10.1071/RDv30n1Ab45 (DOI)

Funding

European Commission
DRYNET - Setting an interdisciplinary/sectorial/international research network to explore dry storage as an alternative strategy for cells/germplasm biobanking 734434
European Commission
DRYSTORE - Exploring dry storage as an alternative biobanking strategy inspired by Nature 749537
European Commission
ERAofART - Epigenetic Risk Assesment of Assisted Reproductive Technologies 692185