Cargando…

Not All Sperm Are Equal: Functional Mitochondria Characterize a Subpopulation of Human Sperm with Better Fertilization Potential

Human sperm samples are very heterogeneous and include a low amount of truly functional gametes. Distinct strategies have been developed to characterize and isolate this specific subpopulation. In this study we have used fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence-activated cell sorting to determine if...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sousa, Ana Paula, Amaral, Alexandra, Baptista, Marta, Tavares, Renata, Caballero Campo, Pedro, Caballero Peregrín, Pedro, Freitas, Albertina, Paiva, Artur, Almeida-Santos, Teresa, Ramalho-Santos, João
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3063179/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21448461
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018112
_version_ 1782200772801331200
author Sousa, Ana Paula
Amaral, Alexandra
Baptista, Marta
Tavares, Renata
Caballero Campo, Pedro
Caballero Peregrín, Pedro
Freitas, Albertina
Paiva, Artur
Almeida-Santos, Teresa
Ramalho-Santos, João
author_facet Sousa, Ana Paula
Amaral, Alexandra
Baptista, Marta
Tavares, Renata
Caballero Campo, Pedro
Caballero Peregrín, Pedro
Freitas, Albertina
Paiva, Artur
Almeida-Santos, Teresa
Ramalho-Santos, João
author_sort Sousa, Ana Paula
collection PubMed
description Human sperm samples are very heterogeneous and include a low amount of truly functional gametes. Distinct strategies have been developed to characterize and isolate this specific subpopulation. In this study we have used fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence-activated cell sorting to determine if mitochondrial function, as assessed using mitochondrial-sensitive probes, could be employed as a criterion to obtain more functional sperm from a given ejaculate. We first determined that mitochondrial activity correlated with the quality of distinct human samples, from healthy donors to patients with decreased semen quality. Furthermore, using fluorescence-activated cell sorting to separate sperm with active and inactive mitochondria we found that this was also true within samples. Indeed, sperm with active mitochondria defined a more functional subpopulation, which contained more capacitated and acrosome intact cells, sperm with lower chromatin damage, and, crucially, sperm more able to decondense and participate in early development using both chemical induction and injection into mature bovine oocytes. Furthermore, cell sorting using mitochondrial activity produced a more functional sperm subpopulation than classic swim-up, both in terms of improvement in a variety of functional sperm parameters and in statistical significance. In conclusion, whatever the true biological role of sperm mitochondria in fertilization, mitochondrial activity is a clear hallmark of human sperm functionality.
format Text
id pubmed-3063179
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-30631792011-03-28 Not All Sperm Are Equal: Functional Mitochondria Characterize a Subpopulation of Human Sperm with Better Fertilization Potential Sousa, Ana Paula Amaral, Alexandra Baptista, Marta Tavares, Renata Caballero Campo, Pedro Caballero Peregrín, Pedro Freitas, Albertina Paiva, Artur Almeida-Santos, Teresa Ramalho-Santos, João PLoS One Research Article Human sperm samples are very heterogeneous and include a low amount of truly functional gametes. Distinct strategies have been developed to characterize and isolate this specific subpopulation. In this study we have used fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence-activated cell sorting to determine if mitochondrial function, as assessed using mitochondrial-sensitive probes, could be employed as a criterion to obtain more functional sperm from a given ejaculate. We first determined that mitochondrial activity correlated with the quality of distinct human samples, from healthy donors to patients with decreased semen quality. Furthermore, using fluorescence-activated cell sorting to separate sperm with active and inactive mitochondria we found that this was also true within samples. Indeed, sperm with active mitochondria defined a more functional subpopulation, which contained more capacitated and acrosome intact cells, sperm with lower chromatin damage, and, crucially, sperm more able to decondense and participate in early development using both chemical induction and injection into mature bovine oocytes. Furthermore, cell sorting using mitochondrial activity produced a more functional sperm subpopulation than classic swim-up, both in terms of improvement in a variety of functional sperm parameters and in statistical significance. In conclusion, whatever the true biological role of sperm mitochondria in fertilization, mitochondrial activity is a clear hallmark of human sperm functionality. Public Library of Science 2011-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3063179/ /pubmed/21448461 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018112 Text en Sousa et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sousa, Ana Paula
Amaral, Alexandra
Baptista, Marta
Tavares, Renata
Caballero Campo, Pedro
Caballero Peregrín, Pedro
Freitas, Albertina
Paiva, Artur
Almeida-Santos, Teresa
Ramalho-Santos, João
Not All Sperm Are Equal: Functional Mitochondria Characterize a Subpopulation of Human Sperm with Better Fertilization Potential
title Not All Sperm Are Equal: Functional Mitochondria Characterize a Subpopulation of Human Sperm with Better Fertilization Potential
title_full Not All Sperm Are Equal: Functional Mitochondria Characterize a Subpopulation of Human Sperm with Better Fertilization Potential
title_fullStr Not All Sperm Are Equal: Functional Mitochondria Characterize a Subpopulation of Human Sperm with Better Fertilization Potential
title_full_unstemmed Not All Sperm Are Equal: Functional Mitochondria Characterize a Subpopulation of Human Sperm with Better Fertilization Potential
title_short Not All Sperm Are Equal: Functional Mitochondria Characterize a Subpopulation of Human Sperm with Better Fertilization Potential
title_sort not all sperm are equal: functional mitochondria characterize a subpopulation of human sperm with better fertilization potential
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3063179/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21448461
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018112
work_keys_str_mv AT sousaanapaula notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT amaralalexandra notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT baptistamarta notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT tavaresrenata notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT caballerocampopedro notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT caballeroperegrinpedro notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT freitasalbertina notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT paivaartur notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT almeidasantosteresa notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential
AT ramalhosantosjoao notallspermareequalfunctionalmitochondriacharacterizeasubpopulationofhumanspermwithbetterfertilizationpotential