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Title: Lower dietary n-6 : n-3 ratio and high-dose vitamin E supplementation improve sperm morphology and oxidative stress in boars. Author: Liu Q, Zhou Y, Duan R, Wei H, Jiang S, Peng J. Journal: Reprod Fertil Dev; 2017 Apr; 29(5):940-949. PubMed ID: 28442045. Abstract: A 2×2 factorial experiment (10 boars per treatment) was conducted for 16 weeks to evaluate the effects of the dietary n-6:n-3 ratio (14:1 vs 6:1) and vitamin E (200 vs 400mg kg-1) on boar sperm morphology and oxidative stress. Sperm mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), reactive oxygen species (ROS), DNA damage (8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine; 8-OHdG), seminal lipoperoxidation (malondialdehyde; MDA) and antioxidant capacity in the serum, spermatozoa and seminal plasma were assessed as indicators of oxidative stress. Sperm production was similar among groups but increased (P<0.05) throughout the 16 weeks of the study. Although sperm α-tocopherol content, ROS and seminal MDA did not differ between the two dietary n-6:n-3 ratio treatments, enhanced antioxidant enzyme activity and MMP, but decreased 8-OHdG, were found in spermatozoa from boars consuming the 6:1 diet. The diet with the 6:1 ratio positively affected sperm morphology at Weeks 12 and 16 (P<0.05). The α-tocopherol content and antioxidant capacity increased in boars with increasing levels of vitamin E supplementation. Compared with low-dose vitamin E, high-dose vitamin E supplementation improved sperm morphology. Overall, the results indicate that an n-6:n-3 ratio of 6:1 and 400 mg/kg vitamin E have beneficial effects on sperm morphology by improving antioxidative stress.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]