Effect of staining and freezing media on sortability of stallion spermatozoa and their post-thaw viability after sex-sorting and cryopreservation

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Abstract

Sex-sorted, frozen-thawed stallion spermatozoa remain out of reach of commercial horse breeders because of the low efficiency of the sex-sorting process and unacceptable fertility rates after insemination. Two experiments were designed to test the effects of alternative staining and freezing media to improve the viability of sex-sorted frozen-thawed stallion spermatozoa. Experiment 1 compared two freezing media, INRA 82® and a modified lactose-ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), for the cryopreservation of sex-sorted stallion spermatozoa. No significant differences between the two freezing media could be identified, suggesting that both cryodiluents would be suitable for incorporation into a sex-preselection protocol for stallion spermatozoa. Experiment 2 compared Kenney's modified Tyrode's (KMT) and Sperm TALP (Sp-TALP) as the staining and incubation medium for stallion spermatozoa prior to sex-sorting. A significant increase in the percentage of acrosome-reacted spermatozoa occurred after staining and incubation in the clarified Sp-TALP compared with KMT. As no improvements in sorting rates were achieved using Sp-TALP, it was concluded that stallion sorting protocols could include KMT as the staining and incubation medium while either INRA 82® or lactose-EDTA could be employed as a cryodiluents. © 2011 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.

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Clulow, J. R., Buss, H., Evans, G., Sieme, H., Rath, D., Morris, L., & Maxwell, W. M. C. (2012). Effect of staining and freezing media on sortability of stallion spermatozoa and their post-thaw viability after sex-sorting and cryopreservation. Reproduction in Domestic Animals, 47(1), 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0531.2007.01010.x

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