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Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

048. FUNCTIONAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN SEX-SORTED AND NON-SORTED SPERM

G. Evans A , S. P. De Graaf A and W. M.C. Maxwell A
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Faculty of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 21(9) 13-13 https://doi.org/10.1071/SRB09Abs048
Published: 26 August 2009

Abstract

The development and application of flow cytometric sorting for the pre-selection of sex has progressed at an increasing rate since the first report of live pre-sexed offspring of rabbits (2). The technique has been extended to production of pre-sexed offspring of numerous species and sorted bull semen is now widely available commercially around the world. Due to the stresses involved in the sex-sorting process, sex-sorted sperm may be functionally compromised in terms of reduced motility and viability, and their fertilising lifespan within the female reproductive tract may be reduced. Consequently, fertility in vivo may be compromised. However, improvements to the technology and a greater understanding of its biological impact on the sperm have facilitated recent developments in sheep, and we have demonstrated that sex-sorting is capable of selecting a functionally superior ram sperm population in terms of both in vitro and in vivo function. This has resulted in high fertility after intrauterine insemination of sex-sorted ram sperm (1). Unfortunately, to date, these results have not been matched in other species.

(1) de Graaf SP, Evans G, Maxwell WMC, Downing JA, O'Brien JK. Successful low dose insemination of flow cytometrically sorted ram spermatozoa in sheep. Reproduction in Domestic Animals 2007; 42: 648–653.

(2) Johnson LA, Flook JP, Hawk HW. Sex preselection in rabbits: live births from X and Y sperm separated by DNA and cell sorting. Biology of Reproduction 1989; 41: 199–203.