Low amounts of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species define human sperm quality

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Abstract

We have applied the mitochondria-specific superoxide fluorescent probe MitoSOX Red (MitoSOX) to detect mitochondria-specific reactive oxygen species (mROS) production in human sperm samples using flow cytometry. We show that human ejaculates are heterogeneous in terms of mROS production, with three subpopulations clearly detectable, comprising sperm that produce increasing amounts of mROS (MitoSOXK, MitoSOXC, and MitoSOXCC). The sperm subpopulation producing the lowest amount of mROS represented the most functional subset of male gametes within the ejaculate, as it was correlated with the highest amount of live and non-apoptotic sperm and increased both in samples with better semen parameters and in samples processed by both density-gradient centrifugation and swim-up, both known to select for higher quality sperm. Importantly, the MitoSOXK subpopulation was clearly more prevalent in samples that gave rise to pregnancies following assisted reproduction. Our work, therefore, not only describe discreet human sperm heterogeneity at the mROS level but also suggests that mROS may represent a strategy to both evaluate sperm samples and isolate the most functional gametes for assisted reproduction. © 2014 Society for Reproduction and Fertility.

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Marques, M., Sousa, A. P., Paiva, A., Almeida-Santos, T., & Ramalho-Santos, J. (2014). Low amounts of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species define human sperm quality. Reproduction, 147(6), 817–824. https://doi.org/10.1530/REP-13-0644

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