Mohammad Yaghoobi,
GRA Cornell University,
Cornell University
Rheotaxis of Mammalian Sperm in Micron-sized Apertures Determines Embryonic Development
Thursday, 30 November 2023 at 17:30
Add to Calendar ▼2023-11-30 17:30:002023-11-30 18:30:00Europe/LondonRheotaxis of Mammalian Sperm in Micron-sized Apertures Determines Embryonic DevelopmentLab-on-a-Chip and Microfluidics World Congress 2023 in Laguna Hills, CaliforniaLaguna Hills, CaliforniaSELECTBIOenquiries@selectbiosciences.com
Female reproductive tract (FRT) imposes physical or chemical barriers in
sperm path to fertilization that naturally selects superior sperm.
These barriers include a fluid flow from ovaries to uterus and the
narrow lumen of uterotubal junction (UTJ). We have shown that the
spermatozoa from high fertility bulls exhibit higher capability to swim
against the flow in a microfluidic device that mimics the structure of
UTJ containing narrow apertures. Bulls with higher rheotaxis index also
possessed lower levels of DNA fragmentation index (DFI). By
parallelizing the apertures in another microfluidic device, we have
separated more than 2 million spermatozoa of various rheotaxis
capabilities and performed conventional in vitro fertilization. Our
results indicated that at higher flow rates there are a greater number
of embryos turning into blastocysts. Compared with centrifugation-based
sperm sorting, the rheotaxis based sperm selection resulted in 23% more
blastocysts resulting from spermatozoa selected at shear rate of 7 s-1.
The cleavage rate of embryos, however, did not change significantly. We
attributed the higher blastocyst yield to lower DFI of spermatozoa. For
human sperm we showed the same pattern of low DFI with increasing the
flow rate where minimum occurred at shear rate of 5 s-1.