# Nanoparticle-Based Approaches for Enhancing In Vitro Fertilization in Animal Reproduction

**Authors:** Elżbieta Gałęska, Alicja Kowalczyk, Marko Samardžija, Gordana Gregurić Gračner, Marcjanna Wrzecińska, Jose Pedro Araujo, José Ángel Hernández Malagón, Mercedes Camiña, Ewa Czerniawska-Piątkowska, Zbigniew Dobrzański

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ijms27062747 · 2026-03-18

## TL;DR

This paper reviews how nanoparticles can improve in vitro fertilization and reproductive technologies in farm animals by enhancing sperm and embryo health.

## Contribution

The paper provides an updated synthesis of nanoparticle-based approaches for improving animal reproduction and assisted fertilization technologies.

## Key findings

- Nanoparticles improve sperm motility and reduce oxidative stress, leading to better fertilization outcomes.
- Nanoparticles can act as carriers for hormones and antioxidants, supporting oocyte maturation and embryo development.
- Nanosorting techniques enable non-invasive selection of viable gametes and improve sperm sexing precision.

## Abstract

Nanotechnology, based on nanoparticles, has become an emerging interdisciplinary tool in reproductive biotechnology, offering innovative opportunities to improve fertilization efficiency and reproductive performance in farm animals. The purpose of this review is to provide an updated synthesis of current research on nanoparticle-based approaches that enhance in vitro fertilization outcomes and other assisted reproductive technologies. The focus is on the biological mechanisms, potential benefits, and limitations of nanoparticle use in animal reproduction. Nanoparticles—including gold, silver, zinc oxide, selenium, and magnetic iron oxide—exhibit distinctive physicochemical properties that enable targeted interactions with gametes and reproductive cells. When used in semen extenders or culture media, nanoparticles improve sperm motility, acrosome and membrane integrity, and reduce oxidative stress and apoptosis. These effects contribute to enhanced fertilization rates and higher embryo developmental competence. In addition, nanoparticles can function as carriers for hormones, antioxidants, and growth factors, stabilizing reagents essential for oocyte maturation, sperm capacitation, and early embryo culture. The review also discusses nanopurification (selectively isolating and removing particles) and nanosorting (separating or organizing nanoscale objects) techniques that allow for non-invasive selection of viable gametes, and fluorescence- and magnet-assisted sorting systems that increase precision in sperm sexing. The mechanical aspects of nanoparticle–cell interactions are analyzed, emphasizing the influence of particle size, dose, and surface modification on both biological efficacy and cytotoxicity. Safety, toxicological concerns, and regulatory frameworks—including International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standards and European Commission recommendations—are critically reviewed to highlight the need for harmonized biocompatibility criteria. Although nanoparticle use in animal reproduction remains largely experimental, accumulated evidence demonstrates its potential to improve reproductive efficiency and reduce economic losses. Integrating nanoparticle-based systems with existing reproduction platforms may represent a transformative step toward sustainable and precision-driven livestock breeding.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** gold (PubChem CID 23985), silver (PubChem CID 23954), zinc oxide (PubChem CID 3007857), selenium (PubChem CID 6326970)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cytotoxicity (MESH:D064420)
- **Chemicals:** selenium (MESH:D012643), silver (MESH:D012834), gold (MESH:D006046), zinc oxide (MESH:D015034), iron oxide (MESH:C000499)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13027357/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13027357