Turkey sperm mobility influences paternity in the context of competitive fertilization

被引:49
作者
Donoghue, AM
Sonstegard, TS
King, LM
Smith, EJ
Burt, DW
机构
[1] ARS, Germplasm & Gamete Physiol Lab, USDA, Beltsville, MD 20705 USA
[2] ARS, Gene Evaluat & Mapping Lab, USDA, Beltsville, MD 20705 USA
[3] Tuskegee Univ, Dept Agr Sci, Tuskegee, AL USA
[4] Roslin Inst, Div Mol Biol, Roslin EH25 9PS, Midlothian, Scotland
关键词
D O I
10.1095/biolreprod61.2.422
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
We have devised a novel means of investigating competitive fertilization in turkeys, using microsatellite genotyping to identify male parentage. Our results demonstrate that sperm mobility is a mechanism responsible in part for paternity efficiency in turkeys. Sperm mobility is composed of several parameters in which sperm motility is a component. Differences between ejaculates in the number of sperm penetrating into a dense, insert, nontoxic solution were measured and used to classify males into high, average, or low sperm mobility phenotypes. Microsatellite genotyping was used to determine parentage of poults after equal numbers of sperm from in males (either high or average phenotype, n = 5, mixed with low phenotype, n = 5) were inseminated simultaneously. In a separate study, the numbers of sperm hydrolyzing the perivitelline layer of eggs were compared between hens inseminated with sperm from high-, average-, or low-phenotype males. Overall, heterospermic inseminations resulted in consistently fewer offspring produced by low-mobility phenotype males. This correlated with physiological data in which semen from the low-mobility males had reduced numbers of sperm at the fertilization site as determined by sperm hole counts in the perivitelline layer of eggs. This is the first illustration of a measurable sperm trait predictive of paternity success in a competitive fertilization trial in turkeys, a species that is predominately reproduced by artificial insemination of multiple-sire pools.
引用
收藏
页码:422 / 427
页数:6
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