# Acrosomal Status and PARP‐1 Nuclear Markers Could Improve Discrimination of Potential Fertility in Good‐Quality Boar Semen Doses

**Authors:** Raquel Ausejo‐Marcos, Sara Miguel‐Jiménez, M. Teresa Tejedor, Belén Gómez‐Giménez, Cristina Soriano‐Úbeda, Felipe Martinez‐Pastor, Noelia Mendoza, Alejandro Vicente‐Carrillo, William Fernando Hurtado, Celia Ávila Holguín, Bernardino Moreno, María Victoria Falceto

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/rda.70145 · Reproduction in Domestic Animals = Zuchthygiene · 2025-11-12

## TL;DR

This study explores how acrosomal status and PARP-1 markers in boar sperm could help predict fertility outcomes in commercial pig farming.

## Contribution

The study identifies acrosomal damage and cPARP as potential biomarkers for predicting fertility in high-quality boar semen.

## Key findings

- Acrosomal damage negatively correlates with fertility outcomes like farrowing rate and total born piglets.
- cPARP levels show potential as a novel biomarker for predicting live births in sows.
- Most semen quality parameters did not significantly affect fertility in high-quality doses.

## Abstract

Reproductive efficiency in boars partly depends on semen quality. However, it is challenging to predict sperm fertility once acceptable quality endpoints have been met. This study aims to establish a link between different semen quality parameters and farm fertility outcomes in semen doses selected for commercial use. We analysed 105 ejaculates from 15 adult Pietrain boars, extended into 45 mL artificial insemination (AI) doses. A total of 605 sows were inseminated (40.1 ± 7.8 females/boar) and fertility, farrowing rate and prolificacy data were recorded. Sperm evaluation included sperm plasma analysis, kinematics, morphology, viability, acrosome integrity, apoptotic‐like changes, mitochondrial activity and DNA damage (DNA fragmentation poly‐ADP ribose polymerase 1, PARP1, together with its product PAR and its cleaved form cPARP). The sperm membrane and acrosome were evaluated using the short hypo‐osmotic swelling test (sHOST) and the osmotic resistance test (ORT). Fertility and farrowing rates exceeded 94%, with an average of 20.18 ± 2.03 piglets born/litter (average born alive: 87.75% ± 5.61%). Negative correlations were found between damaged acrosomes and ultrasound fertility (ρ = −0.240, p = 0.021), farrowing rate (ρ = −0.244; p = 0.019), and total born (r = −0.304; p = 0.003). Average born alive was positively correlated with plasma seminal concentrations of protein (r = 0.273; p = 0.009), fructose (r = 0.243; p = 0.024) and cathepsine B (ρ = 0.257; p = 0.029) but negatively correlated with apoptosis and DNA damage nuclear markers cPARP (r = −0.295, p = 0.005) and PAR (r = −0.209, p = 0.049). However, regression models only showed significant results for predicting the total born from damaged acrosomes and those born alive from cPARP, although the coefficients of determination were very low. Since semen quality and fertility were good, most parameters did not affect fertility outcomes. In agreement with previous studies, acrosomal damage would be a reliable predictor of reproductive outcomes, whereas cPARP would show potential as a novel biomarker.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** PARP1 (poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1), NR1I2 (nuclear receptor subfamily 1 group I member 2)
- **Chemicals:** fructose (PubChem CID 5984)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** JTB (jumping translocation breakpoint) [NCBI Gene 10899] {aka HJTB, HSPC222, PAR, hJT}, PARP1 (poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1) [NCBI Gene 142] {aka ADPRT, ADPRT 1, ADPRT1, ARTD1, PARP, PARP-1}
- **Chemicals:** fructose (MESH:D005632)

## Full text

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## References

41 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12606694/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12606694