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Dive into the research topics where Mary M. Buhr is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary M. Buhr.


Biology of Reproduction | 2002

Sperm apoptosis in fresh and cryopreserved bull semen detected by flow cytometry and its relationship with fertility

Muhammad Anzar; Liwei He; Mary M. Buhr; Thomas G. Kroetsch; K. P. Pauls

Abstract The present study was conducted to detect sperm apoptosis in fresh and frozen semen and to determine its relationship with bull fertility. Three ejaculates were collected from five breeding bulls with different fertility levels and were cryopreserved using standard methods. Two flow cytometric methods were employed to measure apoptosis: an assay for phosphatidylserine (PS) translocation across the plasma membranes using fluorescein-labeled Annexin V and propidium iodide (PI), and an assay for nicked DNA using bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, and fluorescein-labeled anti-BrdU monoclonal antibody. Both assays showed that fresh sperm contained 10%–20% apoptotic sperm. Significant differences in the percentage of apoptotic sperm were observed among the bulls. Cryopreservation induced translocation of PS to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane and caused most of the necrotic cells in fresh sperm to disintegrate. Bull fertility was significantly related to the percentage of necrotic or viable sperm in fresh semen as detected by the Annexin V/PI assay, to the number of apoptotic sperm in fresh semen as detected by the TUNEL assay, and to the level of chromatin or DNA condensation as detected by PI staining. The present study suggests that the presence of apoptotic spermatozoa in fresh semen could be one of the reasons for poor fertility in breeding bulls.


Theriogenology | 1997

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MATERNAL PLASMA PROGESTERONE CONCENTRATION AND INTERFERON-TAU SYNTHESIS BY THE CONCEPTUS IN CATTLE

T.L. Kerbler; Mary M. Buhr; L.T. Jordan; K.E. Leslie; J.S. Walton

The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between maternal progesterone concentration and conceptus synthesis of interferon-tau as an index of conceptus viability at the time of maternal recognition of pregnancy. Heifers of mixed beef breeds were randomly assigned to receive 1 of 2 treatments: 1) intramuscular injection of 1500 IU hCG on Day 5 after artificial insemination (AI; n = 12) or 2) intramuscular injection of saline on Day 5 after AI (n = 17). Ovaries were scanned daily by transrectal real-time ultrasonography. Progesterone concentrations were determined from daily blood samples collected from the jugular vein. Heifers were slaughtered on Day 18 after AI and conceptus tissues were collected. These were incubated individually at 37 degrees C in RPMI medium, and supernatant collected after 24 h. Conceptus secretory products in the supernatant were analyzed for interferon concentration by antiviral assay using vesicular stomatitis virus. Transrectal ultrasonography showed all heifers that received hCG had at least 1 extra corpus luteum (CL) in addition to the spontaneous CL formed from the previous ovulation (10 with 2 CL, 2 with 3 CL). A significant increase in plasma progesterone concentration was detected in pregnant heifers treated with hCG (n = 9) vs pregnant control heifers (n = 11; P < 0.001). There was a tendency for an increase (P = 0.059) in synthesis of interferon-tau by conceptuses from hCG-treated heifers compared to control heifers. Maternal plasma progesterone concentrations were correlated with interferon-tau production by the conceptuses (r = 0.593, P < 0.006), suggesting that higher maternal progesterone may provide a more suitable environment for the developing conceptus.


Biology of Reproduction | 2009

Reactive Oxygen Species and Boar Sperm Function

Basim J. Awda; Meghan Mackenzie-Bell; Mary M. Buhr

Boar spermatozoa are very susceptible to reactive oxygen species (ROS), but ROS involvement in damage and/or capacitation is unclear. The impact of exposing fresh boar spermatozoa to an ROS-generating system (xanthine/xanthine oxidase; XA/XO) on sperm ROS content, membrane lipid peroxidation, phospholipase (PL) A activity, and motility, viability, and capacitation was contrasted to ROS content and sperm function after cryopreservation. Exposing boar sperm (n = 4–5 ejaculates) to the ROS-generating system for 30 min rapidly increased hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and lipid peroxidation in all sperm, increased PLA in dead sperm, and did not affect intracellular O2˙− (flow cytometry of sperm labeled with 2′,7′-dichlorodihydrofluorscein diacetate, BODIPY 581/591 C11, bis-BODIPY-FL C11, hydroethidine, respectively; counterstained for viability). Sperm viability remained high, but sperm became immotile. Cryopreservation decreased sperm motility, viability, and intracellular O2˙− significantly, but did not affect H2O2. As expected, more sperm incubated in capacitating media than Beltsville thawing solution buffer underwent acrosome reactions and protein tyrosine phosphorylation (four proteins, 58–174 kDa); which proteins were tyrosine phosphorylated was pH dependent. Pre-exposing sperm to the ROS-generating system increased the percentage of sperm that underwent acrosome reactions after incubation in capacitating conditions (P < 0.025), and decreased capacitation-dependent increases in two tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins (P ≤ 0.035). In summary, H2O2 is the major free radical mediating direct ROS effects, but not cryopreservation changes, on boar sperm. Boar sperm motility, acrosome integrity, and lipid peroxidation are more sensitive indicators of oxidative stress than viability and PLA activity. ROS may stimulate the acrosome reaction in boar sperm through membrane lipid peroxidation and PLA activation.


Biology of Reproduction | 2001

Incorporating lipids into boar sperm decreases chilling sensitivity but not capacitation potential.

Liwei He; Janice L. Bailey; Mary M. Buhr

Abstract Fresh boar sperm were incubated with small unilamellar liposomes composed of either the total lipids extracted from head plasma membranes (HPM) of fresh boar sperm or selected lipids (SL) of five defined phospholipids with specific acyl chains. To optimize fusion, liposomes with 2 mol% octadecyl rhodamine fluorophore in Beltsville Thawing Solution ± 1 mM CaCl2 were incubated at 35°C with 1 ;ts 107 or 108 spermatozoa/ml and monitored over 60 min, using flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy. The HPM fused to both sperm concentrations faster than SL but was equivalent by 30 min (108 sperm/ml) or 60 min (107 sperm/ml; 57.5 ± 3% and 67.1 ± 8% sperm fused to HPM and SL, respectively) ± Ca2+. Neither HPM nor SL affected onset of capacitation or spontaneous or ionophore-induced acrosome reactions at 0 or 3 h (chlortetracycline and fluorescein isothiocyanate-Pisum sativum agglutinin; n = 3). During cooling and after cryopreservation (n = 4 ejaculates), SL but not HPM significantly improved sperm motility and viability (Sybr14/propidium iodide staining) ± 20% egg yolk, but egg yolk alone was more effective than SL alone. Liposomes of complex composition can fuse to boar sperm without harming in vitro capacitation or acrosome reaction and reduce sperm chilling sensitivity.


Biology of Reproduction | 2006

Na+/K+ATPase as a Signaling Molecule During Bovine Sperm Capacitation

Jacob C. Thundathil; Muhammad Anzar; Mary M. Buhr

Abstract A heteromeric integral membrane protein, Na+/K+ATPase is composed of two polypeptides, alpha and beta, and is active in many cell types, including testis and spermatozoa. It is a well-known ion transporter, but binding of ouabain, a specific inhibitor of Na+/K+ATPase, to Na+/K+ATPase in somatic cells initiates responses that are similar to signaling events associated with bovine sperm capacitation. The objectives of the present study were to demonstrate the presence of Na+/K+ATPase in bovine sperm and to investigate its role in the regulation of bovine sperm capacitation. The presence of Na+/K+ATPase in sperm from mature Holstein bulls was demonstrated by immunoblotting and immunocytochemistry using a monoclonal antibody developed in mouse against the beta 1 polypeptide of Na+/K+ATPase. Binding of ouabain to Na+/K+ATPase inhibited motility (decreased progressive motility, average path velocity, and curvilinear velocity) and induced tyrosine phosphorylation and capacitation but did not increase intracellular calcium levels in spermatozoa. Furthermore, binding of ouabain to Na+/K+ATPase induced depolarization of sperm plasma membrane. Therefore, binding of ouabain to Na+/K+ATPase induced sperm capacitation through depolarization of sperm plasma membrane and signaling via the tyrosine phosphorylation pathway without an appreciable increase in intracellular calcium. To our knowledge, this is the first report concerning the signaling role of Na+/K+ATPase in mammalian sperm capacitation.


Theriogenology | 2008

The negative effects of exogenous DNA binding on porcine spermatozoa are caused by removal of seminal fluid

Ji Hyoun Kang; Hatam A. Hakimov; Arturo Ruiz; Robert M. Friendship; Mary M. Buhr; Serguei P. Golovan

Sperm-mediated gene transfer (SMGT) might become the most efficient and cost effective technique to generate transgenic animals, which will significantly increase their application in biomedical research and in commercial production. Despite some successes, the technique has remained controversial for almost 20 years and despite number of studies the reasons for poor reproducibility of this promising technology has not been understood. We suggest that the reason for poor reproducibility is the presence of natural defences against exogenous DNA invasion acting in spermatozoa or in embryo. Based on previous reports we have investigated the effect of foreign DNA binding on spermatozoa by monitoring motility, viability and genomic DNA damage. Evaluation of DNA binding in sperm collected from 16 boars demonstrated that 28-45% of the added pEGFP plasmid was bound to spermatozoa with 9-32% being internalized in sperm nucleus. In agreement with previous reports, our results demonstrated that the pEGFP-treated sperm show an average a 2-fold decrease in motility (p<0.05), 5-fold decrease in progressive motility (p<0.05), and 1.4-fold increase in number of sperm with highly damaged DNA (p<0.05) as detected by Comet assay. In contrast with previous reports, we demonstrate that all such changes were associated with the removal of seminal plasma during the washing step and not with foreign DNA binding per se. We suggest that poor reproducibility of SMGT most likely result from selection against DNA-loaded sperm at later stages of fertilization.


Biology of Reproduction | 2010

Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinases (ERKs) Pathway and Reactive Oxygen Species Regulate Tyrosine Phosphorylation in Capacitating Boar Spermatozoa

Basim J. Awda; Mary M. Buhr

The extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) family of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is identified for the first time in boar sperm and is associated with capacitation and tyrosine phosphorylation (tyr-P). Reactive oxygen species (ROS) modulate this signal transduction. Western immunoblotting detected the ERK pathway components RAF1, MEK1/2, and ERK1/2 in extracts from fresh boar spermatozoa and determined that their phosphoprotein profiles differed in a capacitation-dependent fashion. Capacitation was accompanied by appearance of two new ERKs (158 and 161 kDa) and disappearance of others. Capacitation was verified with increased tyr-P, which was inhibited by a 30-min pre-exposure of fresh boar sperm to a xanthine/xanthine oxidase ROS-generating system prior to the capacitating incubation; ROS pre-exposure also affected the phosphorylation of RAF1, MEK1/2, and ERK1/2. Preincubating sperm with inhibitors of the ERK components with or without the ROS generator affected subsequent capacitation. Inhibiting ERK1/2 inhibited tyr-P of capacitated boar spermatozoa proteins of 172, 97, and 66 kDa (P ≤ 0.04); with ROS, this inhibition increased (P < 0.002) and tyr-P of 111 kDa declined (P < 0.028). Pre-exposure to ROS plus MEK1/2 inhibitor prevented capacitation-induced tyr-P of proteins of 187 (P < 0.01) and 112 kDa (P < 0.04) versus capacitation with or without ROS. Therefore, ERK1/2 components of the MAPK pathway significantly regulate boar sperm capacitation, and RAF1 and MEK1/2 may have some lesser influence through crosstalk with different pathways. ROS affect RAF1, MEK1/2, and ERK1/2 and could influence the sequential events of boar sperm capacitation.


Theriogenology | 2000

Assessment of stallion spermatozoa viability by flow cytometry and light microscope analysis

K. Merkies; T. Chenier; C. Plante; Mary M. Buhr

Viability of spermatozoa can be assessed by numerous methods, but many are slow and poorly repeatable, and subjectively assess only 100 to 200 spermatozoa per ejaculate. We collected two ejaculates from each of 4 stallions, and extended them to 50x10(6) sperm/mL in a nonfat dried milk solids glucose extender (EZ Mixin). Half the ejaculate was freeze-killed by immersing in liquid nitrogen for 10 min. Aliquots using appropriate volumes of live and freeze-killed spermatozoa provided the following ratios of live:dead spermatozoa: 100:0, 75:25, 50:50, 25:75, 0:100. We determined the viability of each aliquot by 1) motility; 2) eosin-nigrosin staining; and 3) dual fluorescent staining. For the latter, aliquots incubated with SYBR-14 and propidium iodide had live and dead spermatozoa quantitated by fluorescent microscope (2 x 100 sperm/sample) and flow cytometry (10,000 sperm/sample). We found a linear relationship between the ratio of live:dead spermatozoa and the percentage of spermatozoa counted as live (P<0.0001). For fresh spermatozoa, correlation coefficients of the known live:dead ratio were high for all methods (eosin-nigrosin, r>0.75; fluorescent microscope, r>0.76; flow cytometry, r>0.75; motility, r>0.76). To determine viability of cryopreserved equine spermatozoa, we froze 17 fresh ejaculates from 6 stallions in a glycine extender. Each sample was thawed, extended 1:1 with EZ Mixin and evaluated as above. Cryopreserved spermatozoa assessed by flow cytometry tended to be less well correlated (r<0.68) with the other methods, and estimates were significantly higher with eosin-nigrosin staining (P<0.001). This study shows that different methods may equally estimate viability of fresh equine spermatozoa. However, evaluation by flow cytometry appears to be less precise with cryopreserved spermatozoa.


Journal of Andrology | 2009

Comparison of different methods for assessment of sperm concentration and membrane integrity with bull semen.

Muhammad Anzar; Tom Kroetsch; Mary M. Buhr

Assessing semen quality is crucially important for the exploitation of genetically superior sires in an artificial insemination (AI) program. In this study, we compare modern and conventional techniques to estimate bovine sperm concentration and membrane integrity. First, the NucleoCounter SP-100 was validated for sperm concentration and provided statistically reliable and repeatable estimates among aliquots and replicates of 25 fresh ejaculates. Sperm concentrations in 78 ejaculates were then determined with hemacytometer, flow cytometer, and NucleoCounter SP-100 and were significantly correlated (P < .001), with regression coefficients among these 3 techniques close to 1 (P < .01). However, the sperm concentration determined by hemacytometer was lower (P < .01) than by flow cytometer and NucleoCounter SP-100. Forty frozen-thawed semen samples were then assessed for sperm concentration and membrane integrity with hemacytometer, flow cytometer and NucleoCounter SP-100. Significant relationships were found for sperm concentration determined by hemacytometer and NucleoCounter SP-100 and for sperm membrane integrity determined by flow cytometer and NucleoCounter SP-100 (P < .01). Finally, the standard curves of sperm concentrations in 6 spectrophotometers, comparing optical density against counts drawn by hemacytometer and NucleoCounter SP-100 (n = 94 fresh ejaculates) showed different (P < .01) intercepts and regression coefficients (linear, quadratic, cubic). It was calculated that a breeding station can improve its production potential by 13% with the use of NucleoCounter SP-100 instead of hemacytometer for calibration of spectrophotometers. Flow cytometer and NucleoCounter SP-100 can be used with equal confidence to estimate sperm concentration and membrane integrity in domestic animals and human semen.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 1999

Effects of urea and trimethylamine N -oxide on fluidity of liposomes and membranes of an elasmobranch

Kimby N. Barton; Mary M. Buhr; James S. Ballantyne

The effects on membrane fluidity of two solutes of biological importance in elasmobranch fishes, urea and trimethylamine oxide (TMAO), were determined using elasmobranch red blood cell plasma membranes and artificial liposomes. Fluorescence polarizations of three probes with differing sites of insertion (1,6-diphenylhexatriene, cis-parinaric acid, and trans-parinaric acid) were used to study the effects of physiological levels of urea (400 mM) and TMAO (200 mM) separately and together in a 2:1 urea:TMAO ratio (400 mM:200 mM). In the elasmobranch erythrocyte membrane, there was a trend toward an increase in the order of the gel-phase domains when treated with urea, although this was not statistically significant. This effect was counteracted by the presence of TMAO. To determine if the organic solutes were acting directly on the membrane lipids or on the integral proteins, phase-transition profiles of protein-free dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine liposomes were determined. These profiles showed that urea again increased the order of the gel-phase domains of the bilayer; however, this effect was not counteracted by the presence of TMAO. We suggest that the increased order in the gel-phase domains may be an indirect effect of a decrease in the order of the fluid-phase domains. This increase in fluidity may be due either to a disruptive effect of urea on the hydrophobic core of the membrane or to indirect effects mediated by changes in the integral membrane proteins. This study is the first to demonstrate that urea and TMAO may act as counteracting solutes in the elasmobranch erythrocyte membrane and that the counteraction appears to be at the level of the integral proteins rather than the membrane lipids.

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Liwei He

University of Guelph

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