|
|
||||||||
Biology of Reproduction, Vol 3, 120-127, Copyright © 1970 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
1 Canada Department of Agriculture, Research Station, Box 1000, Agassiz, B.C., Canada The effect of incubating chicken semen for 2 hr at 41 C in different parts of the excised
oviduct on the activity of 10 enzymes of sperm, semen pH, sperm motility, and fertility
was studied and compared to fresh and incubated controls. Pooled semen was used.
For all enzymes studied, sperm of the incubated control had a lower activity than the
fresh control. All parts of the oviduct maintained sperm fumarase and aconitase activity
above that of the incubated control, while incubation in the oviduct resulted in a lower
lactic dehydrogenase and aldolase activity than the incubated control. There was no difference in activity between sperm incubated in the oviduct and the incubated control for
creatine kinase, acetylcholinesterase, malic or isocitric dehydrogenase. The isthmus and
infundibulum caused a reduction in glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase compared to the
incubated control. Sperm incubated in the isthmus and lower magnum had a higher
aminopeptidase activity than the incubated control. The effect of incubating sperm in
the magnum of the oviduct in situ on fumarase, aconitase, lactic dehydrogenase, and
aldolase activity was found to be the same as for the excised oviduct. Semen incubated
in the excised oviduct had slightly lower pH than the incubated control. There was no
difference between semen incubated in the excised oviduct and the incubated control with
respect to motility. Sperm of the incubated control had less than one-half the fertilizing
capacity of the fresh control, while semen incubated in the excised oviduct had essentially
zero duration and percentage fertility.
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |