4.6 Article

Low sperm to egg ratio required for successful in vitro fertilization in a pair-spawning teleost, Senegalese sole (Solea senegalensis)

Journal

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.201718

Keywords

flatfish; teleost; aquaculture; gamete; artificial fertilization; assisted reproduction

Funding

  1. Spanish National Institute for Agronomic Research (Instituto Nacional de Investigacion y Tecnologia Agraria y Alimentacion-INIA)-European Fund for Economic and Regional Development (FEDER) [RTA2014-0048]
  2. European Union through ERDF, COMPETE 2020 [038433_REARLING]
  3. National Board of Science and Technology (CONACYT, Mexico)
  4. AGAUR (Government of Catalonia)
  5. European Social Fund

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Injecting gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist to induce ovulation in cultured female Senegalese sole, and collecting sperm from cultured males for in vitro fertilization can improve fertilization success rate. The viability of unfertilized eggs stored at room temperature gradually decreases, and faster fertilization results in higher egg viability.
Cultured Senegalese sole (Solea senegalensis) breeders fail to spawn fertilized eggs. The implantation of large-scale in vitro fertilization protocols, to solve this problem, has been frustrated by low production of poor quality sperm. Cultured females were induced to ovulate with a 5 mu g kg(-1) single injection of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa) and viable eggs (82.6 +/- 9.2% fertilization) were stripped 41:57 +/- 1:46 h after the injection. Sperm was collected from cultured males, diluted in modified Leibovitz and used fresh to fertilize the eggs. Males were not treated with hormones. A nonlinear regression, an exponential rise to a maximum (R = 0.93, p < 0.0001) described the number of motile spermatozoa required to fertilize a viable egg and 1617 motile spermatozoa were sufficient to fertilize 99 +/- 12% (+/- 95% CI) of viable eggs. Similar, spermatozoa egg(-1) ratios of 592 +/- 611 motile spermatozoa egg(-1) were used in large-scale in vitro fertilizations (190 512 +/- 38 471 eggs). The sperm from a single male (145 +/- 50 mu l or 8.0 +/- 6.8 x 10(8) spermatozoa) was used to fertilize the eggs. The mean hatching rate was 70 +/- 14% to provide 131 540 +/- 34 448 larvae per fertilization. The viability of unfertilized eggs stored at room temperature decreased gradually, and the sooner eggs were fertilized after stripping, the higher the viability of the eggs. The collection of sperm directly into a syringe containing modified Leibovitz significantly increased the percentage of motile spermatozoa (33.4 +/- 12.2%) compared with other collection methods. The spz egg(-1) ratios for Senegalese sole were at the lower end of ratios required for fish. Senegalese sole have a pair-spawning reproductive behaviour characterized by gamete fertilization in close proximity with no sperm competition. The provision of a large-scale in vitro fertilization protocol (200 mu l of sperm per 100 ml of eggs) will enable the industry to operate sustainably and implement breeding programmes to improve production.

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