Metabolic signature of cervical mucus in ewe breeds with divergent cervical sperm transport: a focus on metabolites involved in amino acid metabolism
Introduction Cervical artificial insemination (AI) with frozen-thawed semen in sheep has yielded unacceptably low pregnancy rates. The exception is in Norway where vaginal AI yields non-return rates in excess of 60%, which has been attributed to the ewe breed used.
Objectives and methods This study aimed to characterise, for the first time, the ovine follicular phase cervical mucus metabolome, with a focus on the amino acid profile. Cervical mucus was collected from four European ewe breeds with known differences in pregnancy rates following cervical AI with frozen-thawed semen. These were Suffolk (low fertility), Belclare (medium fertility), Norwegian White Sheep (NWS) and Fur (both high fertility).
Results A total of 689 metabolites were identified in the cervical mucus of all the four ewe breeds. Of these, 458 metabolites were altered by ewe breed, which had the greatest effect in the dataset (P<0.05). We detected 194 metabolites involved in the amino acid pathway, of which 133, 56 and 63 were affected by ewe breed, type of cycle and their interaction, respectively (P<0.05). N-methylhydantoin and N-carbamoylsarcosine (degradation products of creatinine pathway) exhibited the greatest fold change decrease in the Suffolk breed compared to Fur and NWS (P<0.001). Oxidized metabolites were also decreased in Suffolk compared to high fertility breeds (P<0.05). In contrast, other metabolites such as 3-indoxyl-sulfate, putrescine, cadaverine were significantly increased in Suffolk at the synchronised cycle.
Conclusion The suboptimal amino acid profile in the cervical mucus of the low fertility Suffolk breed may have negative consequences for sperm transport.
History
Publication
Metabolomics (2023) 19:59Publisher
SpringerOther Funding information
The project was funded through the European Research Area Network, on Sustainable Animal Production (SusAN;Grant no. 16/RD/SusAn/ERA-NET). National funding was provided in Ireland by the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine as well as Teagasc, in France by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR-16-SUSN-0001) and in Norway by The Research Council of Norway (NFR 272338 / E50). Open access funding provided by Norwegian University of Life SciencesAlso affiliated with
- Bernal Institute
Department or School
- Biological Sciences