Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10662/20296
Title: Transient Sperm Starvation Improves the Outcome of Assisted Reproductive Technologies
Authors: Navarrete, Felipe
Aguila, Luis
Martín Hidalgo, David
Luque, Guillermina
Anderstani, Goli
García Vázquez, Francisco A.
Levin, Lonny R
Buck, Jochen
Darszon, Alberto
Buffone, Mariano
Mager, Jesse
Fissore, Rafael
Salicioni, Ana María
Gervasi, María Gracia
Visconti, Pablo Ernesto
Keywords: Espermatozoide;Sperm;Reproducción;Reproduction;Fertilización;Fertilization;Fertilidad;Fertility;Blastocito;Blastocyst;Embrio transferencia;Embryo transfer;ICSI
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: Frontiers Media
Abstract: To become fertile, mammalian sperm must undergo a series of biochemical and physiological changes known as capacitation. These changes involve crosstalk between metabolic and signaling pathways and can be recapitulated in vitro. In this work, sperm were incubated in the absence of exogenous nutrients (starved) until they were no longer able to move. Once immotile, energy substrates were added back to the media and sperm motility was rescued. Following rescue, a significantly higher percentage of starved sperm attained hyperactivated motility and displayed increased ability to fertilize in vitro when compared with sperm persistently incubated in standard capacitation media. Remarkably, the effects of this treatment continue beyond fertilization as starved and rescued sperm promoted higher rates of embryo development, and once transferred to pseudo-pregnant females, blastocysts derived from treated sperm produced significantly more pups. In addition, the starvation and rescue protocol increased fertilization and embryo development rates in sperm from a severely subfertile mouse model, and when combined with temporal increase in Ca2C ion levels, this methodology significantly improved fertilization and embryo development rates in sperm of sterile CatSper1 KO mice model. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) does not work in the agriculturally relevant bovine system. Here, we show that transient nutrient starvation of bovine sperm significantly enhanced ICSI success in this species. These data reveal that the conditions under which sperm are treated impact postfertilization development and suggest that this “starvation and rescue method” can be used to improve assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) in other mammalian species, including humans.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10662/20296
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2019.00262
Appears in Collections:DFSIO - Artículos

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