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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 14, 300-305, Copyright © 1976 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
1 Department of Animal Science,
Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York 14850 Female rabbits were immunized by multiple intradermal injections with washed ejaculated,
epididymal or The very low fertilization rate in immunized females prevented tests for embryonic and fetal
mortality when immunized animals were inseminated. In order to test whether the uterus of
immunized rabbits was hostile to conceptuses, normal embryos were transferred to immunized
females. The actual embryonic and fetal mortality appeared to be higher in immunized animals,
but only the results for young born attained statistical significance (P<0.05). Collectively these
results suggest that the infertility effect of immunization was primarily expressed as a block to
fertilization.
-amylase treated rabbit sperm in Freunds complete adjuvant emulsion. All
treatments suppressed fertility, with only 2.3 percent of 364 eggs recovered from 17 immunized
rabbits fertilized following intravaginal insemination, while the control fertilization rate was 95.7
percent. Reinsemination of females when immunity was declining showed that normal fertility was
attained by about 25 weeks postimmunization. Intramuscular booster injections given to 5 does 61
weeks after initial immunization resulted in 47 percent of 19 eggs recovered being fertilized,
compared to 96 percent fertilization in 26 eggs from 5 control animals.
Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors thank the Population Council for
partial financial support and Mr. Michael Simkin, Dr.
Gary B. Anderson, Mrs. Linda Pierro and Ms. Jacqueline Schiavo for technical help. Drs. C. H. Spilman and
Alan Hunter made many helpful suggestions and Dr.
Hunter kindly assayed some of the (
-amylase treated
sperm.
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