What fractions of the ejaculate should I include when preparing artificial insemination doses?

Francisco A. García VázquezPedro José LlamasIván Hernández CaravacaCarmen Matas ParraChiara Luongo
22-Mar-2022 (4 years 2 months 16 days ago)

Since the modern development of porcine artificial insemination (AI), one of the most frequently asked questions has been what fraction or fractions of the ejaculate should be included in the seminal doses. In general, the sperm-rich fraction of the ejaculate has been the part that has been mostly included in the doses, due to the belief that the final part of the ejaculate (post-sperm fraction characterized by high seminal plasma volume and low sperm concentration) had a deleterious effect on sperm quality during the storage of the doses. It is true that some studies have confirmed this fact, evaluating the effect of each fraction of the ejaculate separately (reviewed by Höfner et al. 2020a), but not assessing the possible synergistic effect of the different fractions as a whole on the storage of seminal doses, fertility, and offspring. To corroborate this fact, we performed a study by preparing 3 different types of seminal doses according to the fractions included during ejaculate collection: 1) Seminal dose F1: includes the sperm-rich fraction of the ejaculate; 2) F2: F1 plus the transition fraction between the rich fraction and the poor fraction; 3) F3: F2 plus the poor fraction. As usual in each collection, the initial pre-sperm fraction was discarded, as well as the gel (filtered fraction). Once the ejaculates were collected, the seminal doses were adjusted to 2000x106 spermatozoa/60 ml with commercial diluent and stored at 16ºC for 3 days. After this time, semen quality was analyzed and AIs were performed with those same doses in multiparous sows (parities 3-5). The experimental design of the study is summarized in Figure 1.

The results of the semen analysis showed that the 3 types of doses maintained a similar sperm quality, without the included ejaculate fractions affecting any parameter (video 1). While it is true that sperm quality is not always a sign of adequate fertility, AI results showed that fertility and prolificacy data were also similar between experimental groups, as well as growth and health data (assessed by hematological and biochemical analyses) in the piglets.<p>Figure 1. Graphical summary of the study.</p>

Video 1. Spermatozoa motility in the different types of seminal doses (F1, F2, F3) after 3 days of being stored at 16ºC.

The results of the study indicate that the inclusion of all ejaculate fractions in the preparation of semen doses does not have an adverse effect on sperm storage or on productive performance after AI. This has a number of advantages to consider:

However, although the results obtained clearly indicate the feasibility of using F3 in seminal doses, we must also take into account some possible limitations:

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In summary, we have demonstrated the potential use of whole ejaculate in swine production with the advantages and disadvantages described above. However, before implementing this practice in AI centers, it is recommended to carry out initial preservation tests of seminal doses with selected males, as was done in this study, in order to check sperm quality and optimize male performance.

Project funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2019-106380RBI00 MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033