Chicken seminal fluid lacks CD9- and CD44-bearing extracellular vesicles

Reprod Domest Anim. 2020 Mar;55(3):293-300. doi: 10.1111/rda.13617. Epub 2020 Jan 21.

Abstract

The avian seminal fluid (SF) is a protein-rich fluid, derived from the testis, the rudimentary epididymis and, finally, from the cloacal gland. The SF interacts with spermatozoa and the inner cell lining of the female genital tract, to modulate sperm functions and female immune responsiveness. Its complex proteome might either be free or linked to extracellular vesicles (EVs) as it is the case in mammals, where EVs depict the tetraspanin CD9; and where those EVs derived from the epididymis (epididymosomes) also present the receptor CD44. In the present study, sperm-free SF from Red Jungle Fowl, White Leghorn and an advanced intercross (AIL, 12th generation) were studied using flow cytometry of the membrane marker tetraspanin CD9, Western blotting of the membrane receptor CD44 and electron microscopy in non-enriched (whole SF) or enriched fractions obtained by precipitation using a commercial kit (Total Exosome Precipitation Solution). Neither CD9- nor CD44 could be detected, and the ultrastructure confirmed the relative absence of EVs, raising the possibility that avian SF interacts differently with the female genitalia as compared to the seminal plasma of mammals.

Keywords: CD44; CD9; electron microscopy; exosome precipitation; rooster; seminal fluid; tetraspanins; western blot.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Blotting, Western / veterinary
  • Chickens / physiology
  • Extracellular Vesicles* / ultrastructure
  • Flow Cytometry / veterinary
  • Hyaluronan Receptors / analysis
  • Male
  • Microscopy, Electron
  • Semen*
  • Species Specificity
  • Tetraspanin 29 / analysis

Substances

  • Hyaluronan Receptors
  • Tetraspanin 29