Antibiotic-free short-term storage of canine sperm at 5 °C preserves functional and mitochondrial integrity
Macarena Castro, Nicole Carrasco-Zambrano, Felipe Pezo, María José Contreras

TL;DR
This study shows that canine sperm can be stored for 48 hours without antibiotics while maintaining quality, reducing antimicrobial resistance risks.
Contribution
The study introduces an antibiotic-free method for short-term canine sperm storage that preserves sperm function and mitochondrial integrity.
Findings
Sperm quality in antibiotic-free storage was comparable to antibiotic-supplemented storage for up to 48 hours.
Storage time reduced membrane and acrosome integrity and mitochondrial function, but not significantly between treatments.
Oxidative stress slightly increased over time but did not compromise overall sperm function.
Abstract
The routine prophylactic use of antibiotics in sperm preservation for reproductive biotechnologies poses increasing concerns due to its potential role in promoting antimicrobial resistance. Therefore, developing storage systems that maintain sperm quality without antibiotics is essential. In dogs, chilled sperm is vital in assisted reproduction for genetic improvement and breed conservation. Typically, a 20% Tris–egg yolk extender with broad-spectrum antibiotics supports semen preservation for up to 3 days. This study evaluated a Tris–egg yolk medium without antibiotics, stored at 5 °C, as an alternative for short-term preservation of canine sperm. Eight ejaculates from dogs of different breeds were divided into two aliquots: a control group diluted in Tris–egg yolk with ampicillin, and a treatment group without antibiotics. Samples were stored at 5 °C and analyzed at 0, 24, and 48 h to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSperm and Testicular Function · Reproductive Biology and Fertility · Reproductive biology and impacts on aquatic species
