Experimental Evidence That Prenatal and Postnatal Developmental Stress Affects the Adult Seminal Fluid Proteome in a Precocial Bird
Chloe Mason, Martin Garlovsky, Oscar Vedder, Trong Khoa Pham, Rachel George, Barbara Tschirren, Nicola Hemmings

TL;DR
Early-life stress in male quail affects the proteins in their seminal fluid, which could impact fertility and reproduction.
Contribution
This study is the first to characterize the proteome of seminal foam in Japanese quail and show how developmental stress alters its composition.
Findings
Prenatal stress increased proteins related to lipid metabolism, inflammation, and oxidative stress in seminal foam.
Postnatal stress increased proteins involved in chromatin organization, carbon metabolism, and antioxidant processes.
Nine proteins linked to metabolic and antioxidant processes were consistently more abundant in developmentally stressed males.
Abstract
Seminal fluid proteins are important modulators of male fertility and reproductive success, yet little is known about how their abundance responds to early‐life developmental stress. Japanese quail Coturnix japonica ) males produce a unique seminal foam that enhances fertilisation success. We characterised the proteome of the seminal foam for the first time and assessed how its composition is influenced by prenatal and postnatal developmental stress. Proteomic identification using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry and subsequent gene ontology (GO) analysis of chicken ( Gallus gallus domesticus) orthologs suggested roles for the foam proteome in sperm maturation and DNA protection, semen liquefaction, sperm plasma membrane homeostasis and energy production for sperm motility. Males that experienced prenatal stress exhibited increased abundance of proteins involved in lipid…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSperm and Testicular Function · Reproductive biology and impacts on aquatic species · Animal Behavior and Reproduction
