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Dive into the research topics where I. Palacín is active.

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Featured researches published by I. Palacín.


Reproduction in Domestic Animals | 2008

Effects of melatonin implants during non-breeding season on sperm motility and reproductive parameters in Rasa Aragonesa rams.

A. Casao; S Vega; I. Palacín; Rosaura Pérez-Pé; A Laviña; Fj Quintín; E Sevilla; J.A. Abecia; J.A. Cebrián-Pérez; F. Forcada; T. Muiño-Blanco

The effect of melatonin implants administered during non-breeding season in Rasa Aragonesa rams on sperm motility parameters and other reproductive traits was assessed. In a first experiment, two Rasa Aragonesa rams were implanted (with melatonin group M), remaining other two males as control group (C). Semen of each group was collected from 1 May to 23 June, twice or three times a week, and motility parameters were assessed using a computer-assisted sperm analysis system. Melatonin increased the percentage of progressive motile spermatozoa, particularly during 46-75 days after melatonin implantation (p < 0.01). In experiment 2, M and C in vitro fertilization ability had been determined by zona-pellucida binding assays, using spermatozoa from experiment 1, obtained 60-70 days after melatonin was implanted. A significantly higher number of spermatozoa attached per oocyte was observed in frozen-thawed immature ovine oocytes incubated with sperm from M animals than in those incubated with sperm from the C group (p < 0.01). Finally, a field assay (experiment 3) was performed. In this case, five Rasa Aragonesa rams were implanted with melatonin and three remained as control group. Sperm doses from those animals were used for artificial insemination of 2608 Rasa Aragonesa ewes from 39 different farms at non-breeding season. Fertility, litter size and fecundity were studied. Semen from melatonin implanted rams seemed to increase both fertility and fecundity in ewes inseminated with spermatozoa obtained 46-60 days after implantation (p < 0.1). Thus, melatonin treatment in rams during non-breeding season modifies sperm motility parameters and seems to improve the fertilization parameters obtained.


Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2006

Effect of undernutrition on uterine progesterone and oestrogen receptors and on endocrine profiles during the ovine oestrous cycle

Cecilia Sosa; José Alfonso Abecia; F. Forcada; C. Viñoles; C. Tasende; J. A. Valares; I. Palacín; Graeme Martin; A. Meikle

In the present study, it was investigated whether undernutrition affected the binding capacity, immunoreactivity and mRNA expression for uterine oestrogen and progesterone receptors (ER and PR, respectively) in sheep, as well as whether the responses were associated with changes in plasma concentrations of progesterone (P4), oestradiol (E2), glucose, fatty acids, insulin, leptin and insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I during the oestrous cycle. Twenty ewes were fed either 1.5 (C) or 0.5 (L) times their maintenance requirements and were killed on Day 5 or 14 of the cycle (Day 0 = oestrus). Compared with Group C, Group L had higher concentrations of non-esterified fatty acids and lower concentrations of insulin, leptin and IGF-I. Group L also had higher plasma concentrations of P4 during the final days of the luteal phase. At oestrus in both treatment groups, there were peaks in the concentrations of glucose, insulin and IGF-I. For ER and PR, transcript expression, binding capacity and immunoreactivity were higher on Day 5 than on Day 14 of the cycle. The binding capacities for ER and PR were lower in Group L than in Group C on Day 5. Group C showed more immunoreactive staining for ER than did Group L in two of five cell types, whereas no effect of treatment was observed for PR immunoreactivity. There was more PR mRNA in the uterine horn contralateral to the corpus luteum in Group C than in Group L ewes. We conclude that undernutrition impairs steroid receptor expression and binding capacity. This may alter the uterine environment and help explain the reductions in embryo survival.


Domestic Animal Endocrinology | 2009

Early pregnancy alters the metabolic responses to restricted nutrition in sheep

Cecilia Sosa; José Alfonso Abecia; M. Carriquiry; F. Forcada; Graeme Martin; I. Palacín; A. Meikle

This study investigated whether a 27-day period of nutrition at half-maintenance during early pregnancy (up to Day 14) could alter maternal endocrine responses. Forty-six ewes were fed all or half of their maintenance requirements and slaughtered on Day 14 of the oestrous cycle or pregnancy. We used real time RT-PCR to study gene expression of growth hormone receptor (GHR) and leptin in adipose tissue and GHR, GHR1A and of the insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) in the liver. Blood profiles of metabolites and metabolic hormones were also determined. Throughout the experiment, underfed animals presented lower body weight and body condition, greater plasma concentrations of non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), and lower plasma concentrations of leptin, compared to adequately fed animals. Undernutrition affected the patterns of gene expression in adipose and hepatic tissues, and the responses differed between pregnant and non-pregnant ewes. In adequately fed ewes, pregnancy up-regulated leptin mRNA expression in adipose tissue, a response that was impaired in underfed ewes. The hepatic expression of IGF-I mRNA was increased by pregnancy in underfed animals while no effect was observed in adequately fed ewes. It remains to be determined whether the changes in the endocrine milieu are paralleled by modifications in uterine gene expression that could alter the environment of the embryo during early pregnancy.


Reproduction in Domestic Animals | 2009

Undernutrition and exogenous melatonin can affect the in vitro developmental competence of ovine oocytes on a seasonal basis.

Mi Vázquez; F. Forcada; A. Casao; J.A. Abecia; Cecilia Sosa; I. Palacín

This study evaluated the effects of exogenous melatonin and level of nutrition on oocyte competence, in vitro fertilization (IVF), and early embryonic development in sheep during seasonal anoestrus (SA) and the reproductive season (RS). Adult Rasa Aragonesa ewes were assigned randomly to one of four treatment groups in two experiments based on a 2 x 2 x 2 factorial design. Individuals were treated (+MEL) or not treated (-MEL) with a subcutaneous implant of melatonin for 42 days and then were fed 1.5 (Control, C) or 0.5 (Low, L) times the daily maintenance requirements for 20 days. Ewes were synchronized and mated at oestrus (Day = 0). On Day 5, ovaries were collected and oocytes were used for IVF. Season had a significant (p < 0.01) effect on the number of oocytes recovered (RS: 19.6 +/- 1.0; SA: 14.5 +/- 1.0) and the number of healthy oocytes (RS: 13.9 +/- 0.7; SA: 9.0 +/- 0.7). In the RS, neither nutrition nor melatonin had a significant effect on the evaluated oocytes quality parameters although melatonin implants appeared to reduce the number of unhealthy oocytes in the undernourished group (p < 0.05). During SA, in undernourished ewes exogenous melatonin tended to increase the number of healthy (L+MEL: 9.4 +/- 1.0, L-MEL: 7.6 +/- 1.4; p < 0.1), and significantly improved both cleaved oocytes (L+MEL: 7.0 +/- 0.7, L-MEL: 4.1 +/- 0.9; p < 0.05) and blastocyst rate (L+MEL: 37.2, L-MEL: 21.9%; p < 0.05). In conclusion, oocyte competence in ewes was affected by season, and melatonin implants appeared to improve developmental competence in the seasonal anoestrous period, particularly in experimentally undernourished ewes.


Italian Journal of Animal Science | 2008

Effects of exogenous melatonin treatment on out-of-season ram fertility

I. Palacín; J.A. Abecia; F. Forcada; A. Casao; José-Álvaro Cebrián; Teresa Muiño; Carlos Palacios; Juan Miguel Pontes

Abstract Three field experiments were performed to determine the effects of melatonin implants on the fertility of rams. The experiments were performed on three breeds (Rasa Aragonesa, Assaf and Manchega) in three commercial farms in Spain. Melatonin-treated rams (M) and non-implanted control rams (C) mated either ewes oestrous-induced with FGA intravaginal sponges (Rasa Aragonesa and Assaf farms) or melatonin-treated ewes during the anoestrous period (Manchega farm). Scrotal circumference (SC) was measured at melatonin implantation and at ram introduction (nearly 45 d later). Lambing rate, litter size, and fecundity were recorded at parturition. Melatonin implants in rams increased the number of lambs born per ewe in Rasa Aragonesa (19%), Assaf (9%), and Manchega (7%) because of the higher lambing rates exhibited by ewes mated with melatonin-treated rams (Rasa Aragonesa: 80.2% vs 70.5%, P<0.05; Assaf: 74.2% vs 68.0%, NS; Manchega: 90.0% vs 81.5%, P<0.05; for M and C groups, respectively). As a result, the number of extra lambs born per treated ewe was 0.17, 0.10, and 0.10 in the Rasa Aragonesa, Assaf, and Manchega ewes, respectively. In the M and C groups of Rasa Aragonesa rams, mean scrotal circumference increased significantly between the start of the experiments and the onset of mating, but the two groups did not differ significantly at the implantation or at the onset of mating. In the melatonin-treated and control Assaf rams, scrotal circumference increased over the course of the experiments but, at the onset of mating, the melatonin-treated rams had higher SC than did the control rams. Melatonin-treated Manchega rams had scrotal circumferences that were significantly greater than those of the control rams. In the Rasa Aragonesa and Manchega breeds, treating rams using melatonin implants significantly increased the net lamb production of ewes in field conditions. In the Assaf breed, the number of extra lambs born per ewe mated with melatonin treated rams was lower than in the other breeds, even though rams exhibited a significant increase in scrotal circumference. Further research involving the study of semen quality has been planned.


Theriogenology | 2012

Automatic evaluation of ram sperm morphometry

J.L. Yániz; S. Vicente-Fiel; S. Capistrós; I. Palacín; P. Santolaria

This study was designed to develop a new method based on fluorescence microscopy and image analysis for the automatic assessment of sperm morphometry and to study separately the effect of drying and fixation on the parameters of head sperm morphometry in the ram. The study was divided into two experiments. In the first experiment, ejaculates from 25 adult males were collected using an artificial vagina, diluted and divided into four sample aliquots. The first was labeled directly with Hoechst 33342 (FRESH), and the others were processed as smears. Between smears, one group was directly labeled with Hoechst after air drying (DRIED), and the other were fixed either with glutaraldehyde (GLUT), or with methanol (MET), and labeled with Hoechst afterward. Digital images of the fluorescence-labeled sperm were recorded with a digital camera, and sperm heads were automatically captured and analyzed using the ImageJ program. The method used allowed a fast and automatic selection of most sperm heads for a given image with high precision. There was a general trend toward significant decrease in head length, width, area and perimeter of air-dried sperm compared with fresh sperm. On average, this decrease was of 4.1% in length, 4.3% in width, 9.1% in area, and 2.8% in perimeter. Between semen smears, fixation with glutaraldehyde significantly increased head sperm dimensions. The smears fixed with glutaraldehyde method is recommended for a more practical use than with fresh samples, providing better quality images than the other methods, and because the morphometric results obtained were more similar to the FRESH group than those of the DRIED and MET. In the second experiment, ejaculates from adult males were used to compare the sperm head morphometric results obtained with the new method developed (using the GLUT treatment as reference) with a more conventional CASMA method (semen smears stained with Hemacolor and processed with the ISAS commercial software, HEM). The GLUT method allowed the analysis of 100% of sperm, whereas only 93% of sperm could be analyzed using HEM. Spermatozoa displayed a bigger size when processed with HEM than with GLUT method in all primary sperm head morphometric parameters. A significant correlation was observed between the two methods used in this experiment for all morphometric size parameters. The new method developed allows automatic determination of sperm head morphometry in a reduced time, which facilitates its use in routine semen analysis. It was concluded that the automation of sperm morphometry is feasible using fluorescence microscopy and image analysis and that the effect of drying and fixation was less important than previously stated.


Animal Reproduction Science | 2013

A comparative study of sperm morphometric subpopulations in cattle, goat, sheep and pigs using a computer-assisted fluorescence method (CASMA-F)

S. Vicente-Fiel; I. Palacín; P. Santolaria; J.L. Yániz

This study was designed to compare the sperm nuclear morphometric subpopulations of four species of domestic artiodactyls (cattle, sheep, goat and pigs). Samples from 20 males of each species were collected. After semen collection, sperm concentration and motility were measured and samples prepared for morphometric determinations. Smears were fixed with 2% glutaraldehyde, stained with Hoechst 33342 and photographed. At least 200 spermatozoa per sample were processed using the Image J analysis open software. Clustering procedures were performed to identify sperm subpopulations using the morphometric data obtained from each species. Results of the present study show that, applying the computer-assisted sperm morphometry analyisis-fluorescence (CASMA-F) technology and multivariate cluster analyses, it was possible to determine the subpopulations of spermatozoa with different morphometric characteristics in the four species studied. Bulls and boars had two clearly differentiated size categories: large and small. However, the final sperm subpopulations were four in the bull (large-round, large-elongated, small-round, and small-elongated) and only three in the boar (large, small-elongated and small-round). In small ruminant species, three sperm nuclei size categories were established: large, average sized and small. Two of these subpopulations were also elongated in goat bucks, with three subpopulations (large-round, small-elongated and average size-elongated). In the ram three morphometric subpopulations were also obtained (large, small and average size-round), but none was elongated. When comparing among species, sperm subpopulations were smaller in the buck and less elliptical and elongated in the ram than those in the other species studied. Male variability was identified in the distribution of sperm subpopulations described in the four species studied. It was concluded that the combination of CASMA-F technology with multivariate cluster analyses allow the study of morphometric sperm subpopulations and that there are important variations in the subpopulations among the four species studied.


Animal Reproduction Science | 2009

Effects of melatonin and undernutrition on the viability of ovine embryos during anestrus and the breeding season

M.I. Vázquez; F. Forcada; A. Casao; Cecilia Sosa; I. Palacín; J.A. Abecia

This study examined the effects of melatonin and level of nutrition on embryo yield during anestrous and breeding season. Adult Rasa Aragonesa ewes were assigned randomly to one of the four treatment groups in two experiments using a 2x2x2 factorial design. Individuals were treated (+MEL) or not treated (-MEL) with a subcutaneous implant of melatonin for 42d (Melovine, CEVA) and fed 1.5 (control, C) or 0.5 (low, L) times the daily maintenance requirements for 20d. Ewes were mated at oestrus (Day=0) and embryos were recovered on Day 5. Level of nutrition and melatonin supplements did not have a significant effect on ovulation rate or the number of recovered ova per ewe in the Reproductive Season (RS) and the Anestrous Season (AS). During the RS, undernutrition reduced the number of viable embryos per ewe (C: 1.1+/-0.2; L: 0.6+/-0.2; P<0.05); however, the number of viable embryos per ewe in the L+MEL group (0.2+/-0.15) was significantly lower than it was in the L, C+MEL and C groups (0.9+/-0.3, 1.2+/-0.3, 1.0+/-0.4, respectively; P<0.05). In the AS, nutrition did not have a significant effect on the number of viable embryos per ewe, although melatonin supplements might have improved rates slightly. Embryo viability rate (% viable embryos/embryos recovered) was unaffected by melatonin supplements or level of nutrition in the RS and the AS. Season had a strong effect on the number of viable embryos per functional corpus luteum among ewes in the L+MEL group, only (RS: 0.2+/-0.1; AS: 0.6+/-0.2; P<0.05). In conclusion, undernutrition impaired the viability of sheep embryos in the RS, particularly among ewes that were given melatonin supplements subcutaneously, but melatonin appeared to improve embryo quality in the AS, which suggests that the mechanisms involved in the interactive effects of melatonin and nutrition on embryo development are influenced by season.


Animal Reproduction Science | 2015

Predictive capacity of sperm quality parameters and sperm subpopulations on field fertility after artificial insemination in sheep

P. Santolaria; S. Vicente-Fiel; I. Palacín; E. Fantova; M.E. Blasco; M.A. Silvestre; J.L. Yániz

This study was designed to evaluate the relevance of several sperm quality parameters and sperm population structure on the reproductive performance after cervical artificial insemination (AI) in sheep. One hundred and thirty-nine ejaculates from 56 adult rams were collected using an artificial vagina, processed for sperm quality assessment and used to perform 1319 AI. Analyses of sperm motility by computer-assisted sperm analysis (CASA), sperm nuclear morphometry by computer-assisted sperm morphometry analysis (CASMA), membrane integrity by acridine orange-propidium iodide combination and sperm DNA fragmentation using the sperm chromatin dispersion test (SCD) were performed. Clustering procedures using the sperm kinematic and morphometric data resulted in the classification of spermatozoa into three kinematic and three morphometric sperm subpopulations. Logistic regression procedures were used, including fertility at AI as the dependent variable (measured by lambing, 0 or 1) and farm, year, month of AI, female parity, female lambing-treatment interval, ram, AI technician and sperm quality parameters (including sperm subpopulations) as independent factors. Sperm quality variables remaining in the logistic regression model were viability and VCL. Fertility increased for each one-unit increase in viability (by a factor of 1.01) and in VCL (by a factor of 1.02). Multiple linear regression analyses were also performed to analyze the factors possibly influencing ejaculate fertility (N=139). The analysis yielded a significant (P<0.05) relationship between sperm viability and ejaculate fertility. The discriminant ability of the different semen variables to predict field fertility was analyzed using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Sperm viability and VCL showed significant, albeit limited, predictive capacity on field fertility (0.57 and 0.54 Area Under Curve, respectively). The distribution of spermatozoa in the different subpopulations was not related to fertility.


Animal Reproduction Science | 2015

Sperm population structure in high and low field fertility rams

J.L. Yániz; I. Palacín; S. Vicente-Fiel; Jóse Antonio Sánchez-Nadal; P. Santolaria

The aim of the present study was to investigate whether differences in field fertility of rams are reflected in differences in sperm morphometric and kinematic population structures. The association between sperm morphometric and kinematic subpopulations was also investigated. Ejaculates from 8 adult rams, 4 with high and 4 with low field fertility, were collected weekly using an artificial vagina over 6 consecutive weeks. Analyses of sperm motility using computer-assisted sperm analysis (CASA) and sperm nuclear morphometry using computer-assisted sperm morphometry-fluorescence were performed. Clustering procedures using the kinematic and morphometric data from high and low field fertility rams resulted in the classification of spermatozoa in three kinematic and three morphometric sperm subpopulations. The distribution of subpopulations between rams of high and low field fertility was significantly different (P<0.05), with higher percentages of spermatozoa exhibiting fast and linear movements and those with large and long nuclei in the high fertility group. However, these subpopulations were not correlated. Logistic regression analyses were also performed to evaluate the relative utility of sperm subpopulations to classify rams in high and low field fertility. Total progressive sperm motility and the proportion of large and long spermatozoa were identified as the most consistent indicators of fertility. It was concluded that high and low fertility rams had clear differences in morphometric and kinematic sperm subpopulations, and that the most consistent indicators of fertility were the total progressive motility and the proportion of spermatozoa with large and long head present in the ejaculate.

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F. Forcada

University of Zaragoza

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J.A. Abecia

University of Zaragoza

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J.L. Yániz

University of Zaragoza

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A. Casao

University of Zaragoza

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