THE MOTILITY OF RAM AND BULL SPERMATOZOA IN DILUTE SUSPENSION
Open Access
- 20 March 1953
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 36 (4), 449-462
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.36.4.449
Abstract
1. Ram and bull spermatozoa suspended in a glucose-sodium chloride solution rapidly lose motility at relatively high dilutions. The substitution of chloride-free diluents does not alter the phenomenon. 2. The rapid immobilization of ram and bull spermatozoa due to high dilution may be partially prevented by the addition of supernatants of either ram or bull semen, although motility is not maintained at the same level as in a more concentrated specimen. Various other substances which also partially protect spermatozoa are egg albumin, plasma albumin, plasma gamma globulin, starch, and glycogen. 3. Washing ram spermatozoa six times greatly reduces motility. This is not restored by the addition of ram seminal plasma which, however, reverses the concurrent head agglutination. 4. Washing ram and bull spermatozoa four times results in considerable loss of motility and head agglutination both of which may be reversed by the addition of seminal plasma. 5. Potassium chloride at 0.005 M concentration partially restores the motility of four times washed ram spermatozoa at 24°C. or 37°C. but not that of similarly treated bull spermatozoa.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Respiration of Sea-Urchin SpermatozoaJournal of Experimental Biology, 1950
- Effects of Dilution on Motility of Bull Spermatozoa and the Relation between Motility in High Dilution and FertilityJournal of Animal Science, 1949
- The effect of variations in osmotic pressure and electrolyte concentration on the motility of rabbit spermatozoa at different hydrogen-ion concentrationsThe Journal of Physiology, 1948
- The motility and viability of rabbit spermatozoa at different hydrogen‐ion concentrationsThe Journal of Physiology, 1947