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Dive into the research topics where T. Mogas is active.

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Featured researches published by T. Mogas.


Theriogenology | 2001

Effects of glucose and fructose on motility patterns of dog spermatozoa from fresh ejaculates.

T. Rigau; M Farré; Joan Ballester; T. Mogas; A. Peña; Joan E. Rodríguez-Gil

This study was performed to gain insight about how fructose and glucose modulate dog spermatozoa motility in the absence of other motility-modulating factors. Incubation of dog spermatozoa from fresh ejaculates in a basal medium without sugars for 60 min at 37 degrees C induced a progressive decrease in the percentage of motile spermatozoa and in some mean motility parameters, such as mean velocity (VAP), linear coefficient (LIN) and dance (DNC), and an increase in the mean frequency of head displacement (BCF). This indicates a progressive loss of linearity and an increase in oscillatory movement. Addition of 10 mM fructose prevented these effects. Incubation in a basal medium with 10 mM glucose for 60 min at 37 degrees C provoked a fast and intense decrease of LIN and a slight increase of DNC, inducing a less linear and more oscillatory mean movement. Neither fructose nor glucose modified the percentage of motile spermatozoa. The response to both sugars was dose-dependent, with differences appearing at concentrations as low as 1 mM. An analysis of the spermatozoa subpopulation placed above the 95th percentile of the whole population and a factorial analysis of the data indicated that the changes in the mean values of the motility parameters were mainly due to a specific motile subpopulation that had a strong reaction to the two sugars. Our results indicate that fructose, at concentrations from 1 to 10 mM, induced a more linear and less oscillatory motility pattern than glucose. Moreover, from our results we suggest the presence of motile dog sperm subpopulations with an increased sensitivity to fructose and glucose.


Cryobiology | 2008

Cryotops versus open-pulled straws (OPS) as carriers for the cryopreservation of bovine oocytes: Effects on spindle and chromosome configuration and embryo development☆

Roser Morató; D. Izquierdo; María Teresa Paramio; T. Mogas

Two experiments were designed to assess the effectiveness of cryopreserving bovine MII oocytes using cryotops as the carrier system for vitrification. In the first experiment, we examined the developmental competence of oocytes after: (i) vitrification in open-pulled straws (OPS method); or (ii) vitrification in <0.1mul medium droplet on the surface of a specially constructed fine polypropylene strip attached to a plastic handle (Cryotop method). In the second experiment, warmed oocytes that had been vitrified in OPS or cryotops were fixed to analyze spindle and chromosome configuration. In all experiments both cow and calf oocytes were used. Significantly different fertilization rates were observed between the vitrification groups: 31.5% and 20.2% for the cow and calf oocytes vitrified in OPS, respectively, versus 46.1% and 46.4% for the oocytes vitrified using cryotops. After in vitro fertilization, 3.8% of the calf oocytes and 5.3% of the cow oocytes developed to the blastocyst stage. All blastocysts from vitrified oocytes resulted from the Cryotop method. A significantly lower percentage of the OPS-vitrified calf oocytes showed a normal spindle configuration (37.8%) compared to control fresh oocytes (69.9%), while normal spindle and chromosome configurations were observed in a significantly higher proportion of the cryotop-vitrified calf oocytes (60.2%). For the cow oocytes, 60.6% in the OPS group and 60.3% in the Cryotop group exhibited a normal morphology after warming. These findings suggest the cryotop system is a more efficient carrier for vitrification than OPS for the cryopreservation of bovine oocytes.


Theriogenology | 1994

Meiotic competence of prepubertal goat oocytes.

A. Martino; T. Mogas; M.J. Palomo; M.T. Paramio

The object of this work was to evaluate in vitro maturation of follicular oocytes from the ovaries of prepubertal goats obtained from the slaughterhouse. To obtain the oocytes, follicles were dissected and classified according to their diameters. In the first experiment, oocytes were matured in vitro with granulosa cells. No significant differences were detected in the percentages of maturation between adult and prepubertal goat oocytes recovered from follicles of 2.5 to 6.0 mm in diameter (81.82 vs 72.47%, respectively). The percentage of maturation increased to 88.0% in prepubertal goat oocytes from 3.0 to 6.0-mm follicles. In the second experiment, the percentage of maturation of prepubertal goat oocytes was greater after 27 than after 24 h. In the third experiment, the maturational capacity of prepubertal goat oocytes according to follicular diameter was evaluated. The percentages of maturation after 27 h of culture with no granulosa cells were 24.14, 56.60 and 74.78%, respectively, for follicles 1.0 to 1.9 mm, 2.0 to 2.9 mm, and 3.0 to 6.0 mm in diameter. As the follicular diameter increased, growth of the oocyte as well as a greater number of oocytes with more cumulus cell layers were observed. A correlation between the diameter of the oocyte and its competence to complete in vitro maturation was also observed. Oocytes with more cumulus cell layers showed only a slight superiority in their capacity for maturation in large-size follicles (3.0 to 6.0 mm), but the difference was not significant. In conclusion, oocytes from prepubertal goats complete their growth and reach meiotic competence in follicles larger than 3.0 mm. With these oocytes it is possible to obtain in vitro maturation results similar to those from adult goats.


Theriogenology | 1997

Developmental capacity of in vitro matured and fertilized oocytes from prepubertal and adult goats

T. Mogas; M.J. Palomo; M.D. Izquierdo; M.T. Paramio

The developmental competence of oocytes from prepubertal and adult goats was studied through in vitro maturation, fertilization and embryo culture up to the blastocyst stage. Oocytes were recovered from antral follicles of prepubertal and adult goat ovaries, with or without ovarian stimulation with exogenous FSH. The effect of different sources of granulosa cells during IVM on the developmental competence of prepubertal goat oocytes was also noted. Oocytes were matured for 27 h at 38.5 degrees C in 5% CO(2) in air in 50-microl microdrops in TCM199 supplemented with 20% estrus goat serum, FSH, LH and estradiol-17beta or in 2 ml of the same medium supplemented with granulosa cells. Matured oocytes were inseminated with freshly ejaculated spermatozoa following capacitation At 24 h post-insemination, the oocytes were transferred to a granulosa cell monolayer, and early embryo development was evaluated until Day 10. Results show that the developmental ability of embryos from prepubertal goats after IVM and IVF is similar to those from adult goats. Treatment of the prepubertal and adult goats with FSH did not improve the developmental capacity of the resulting embryos. On studying the addition of different sources of granulosa cells to a maturation system of 2 ml of medium, a significantly positive effect of the cells from primed females was observed on the percentage of maturation, on embryo cleavage and on the percentage of embryos that overcame the in vitro developmental block from 8 to 16 cells.


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 2000

Evidence for a functional glycogen metabolism in mature mammalian spermatozoa.

Joan Ballester; Josep M. Fernndez-Novell; J. Rutllant; M. Garca-Rocha; M. Jess Palomo; T. Mogas; Alejandro Pea; T. Rigau; Joan J. Guinovart; Joan E. Rodrguez-Gil

The glycogen content in fresh raw dog spermatozoa was 0.22 ± 0.03 μmol/mg protein. This matched with the presence of a glycogen‐like staining in the head and midpiece. Glycogen levels lowered to 0.05 μmol/mg protein after incubation for 60 min without sugars. Addition of either 10 mM fructose or 10 mM glucose increased glycogen content to 0.70 μmol/mg protein. On the other hand, glycogen synthase activity ratio of fresh dog sperm (0.35 ± 0.07, measured in the absence and the presence of glucose 6‐P) increased to 0.55 with 10 mM fructose for 20 min, whereas glucose had a smaller effect. Spermatozoa extracts had also a protein of about 100 Kd, which reacted against a rat liver glycogen synthase antibody. This was located in sperm head and midpiece. Furthermore, glycogen phosphorylase activity ratio measured in presence and absence of AMP (0.25 ± 0.03 in fresh samples) decreased to 0.15 by 10 mM glucose for 20 min, whereas fructose was less potent in this regard. The maximal effect of glucose and fructose were observed from 10–20 mM onwards. This work is the first indication for a functional glycogen metabolism in mammal spermatozoa, which could play an important role in regulating sperm survival in vivo. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 56:207–219, 2000.


Theriogenology | 1999

EFFECT OF SEMEN PREPARATION ON IVF OF PREPUBERTAL GOAT OOCYTES

M.J. Palomo; D. Izquierdo; T. Mogas; M.T. Paramio

The aim of these experiments was to study the effects of different methods of washing and selection of spermatozoa on the IVF of IVM oocytes from prepubertal goats. Fresh ejaculates from 3 males of proven fertility were processed according to the following treatments: 1) centrifugation in TALP, 2) centrifugation in sucrose-based Ficoll medium, 3) centrifugation in Percoll gradients at 40 and 80%, 4) by swim-up and 5) by dilution of spermatozoa (1:40) in (1:1) TALP. In all 5 treatments spermatozoa were incubated for 45 min with 100 microg/mL of heparin and then added to Fert-TALP. Oocytes were matured for 27 h in TCM-199 supplemented with 20% estrous goat serum (EGS), FSH, LH and estradiol-17beta. Spermatozoa (4x10(6) cells/mL) were coincubated with oocytes in 100 microL of Fert-TALP with hypotaurine for 24 h, after which the oocytes were transferred to a granulosa cells monolayer in TCM-199 plus 10% of EGS for 24 h (48 h post insemination). At 17 h post insemination a sample of sperm-exposed oocytes was taken and stained in lacmoid to observe sperm penetration and the formation of pronuclei. At 48 h post insemination the cleavage rate of oocytes was evaluated. Motility, viability and acrosome status of the spermatozoa were evaluated immediately after the mixing of the ejaculates, after washing and selection treatments, and after incubation with heparin and at 17 h post insemination. The different ejaculate treatments did not affect the penetration and cleavage rates of oocytes. At 48 h post insemination the cleavage rate was 46.9, 36.6 and 29.0% for dilution, Ficoll and swim-up preparations, respectively. Only the swim-up protocol improved sperm motility and viability compared with that of the initial semen sample and with the other sample treatments. At 17 h post insemination the semen parameters were the same for all sperm sample treatments.


Biology of Reproduction | 2004

Gluconeogenesis-Linked Glycogen Metabolism Is Important in the Achievement of In Vitro Capacitation of Dog Spermatozoa in a Medium Without Glucose

Jl Albarracín; J.M. Fernández-Novell; Joan Ballester; María Cecilia Rauch; Armando Quintero-Moreno; A. Peña; T. Mogas; T. Rigau; Alejandro J. Yáñez; Joan J. Guinovart; Juan C. Slebe; Ilona I. Concha; Joan E. Rodríguez-Gil

Abstract In vitro capacitation of dog spermatozoa in a medium without sugars and with lactate as the metabolic substrate (l-CCM) was accompanied by a progressive increase of intracellular glycogen during the first 2 h of incubation, which was followed by a subsequent decrease of glycogen levels after up to 4 h of incubation. Lactate from the medium is the source for the observed glycogen synthesis, as the presence of [14C]glycogen after the addition to l-CCM with [14C]lactate was demonstrated. The existence of functional gluconeogenesis in dog sperm was also sustained by the presence of key enzymes of this metabolic pathway, such as fructose 1,6-bisphophatase and aldolase B. On the other hand, glycogen metabolism from gluconeogenic sources was important in the maintenance of a correct in vitro fertilization after incubation in the l-CCM. This was demonstrated after the addition of phenylacetic acid (PAA) to l-CCM. In the presence of PAA, in vitro capacitation of dog spermatozoa suffered alterations, which translated into changes in capacitation functional markers, like the increase in the percentage of altered acrosomes, a distinct motion pattern, decrease or even disappearance of capacitation-induced tyrosine phosphorylation, and increased heterogeneity of the chlorotetracycline pattern in capacitated cells. Thus, this is the first report indicating the existence of a functional glyconeogenesis in mammalian spermatozoa. Moreover, gluconeogenesis-linked glycogen metabolism seems to be of importance in the maintenance of a correct in vitro capacitation in dog sperm in the absence of hexoses in the medium.


Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2010

Survival and apoptosis rates after vitrification in cryotop devices of in vitro-produced calf and cow blastocysts at different developmental stages.

Roser Morató; D. Izquierdo; María Teresa Paramio; T. Mogas

Two experiments were designed to determine the ability of in vitro-cultured blastocysts at different stages of development to survive the vitrification procedure using cryotop devices. Day 7 and Day 8 embryos were classified as non-expanded, expanded or hatching and/or hatched blastocysts. In the first experiment, we examined the survival rate of vitrified-warmed blastocysts after 3 h incubation in synthetic oviducal fluid (SOF) medium. In the second experiment, vitrified-warmed blastocysts were evaluated using the terminal deoxyribonucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-digoxigenin nick end-labelling (TUNEL) technique to detect nuclei with damaged DNA. In both experiments, results for cow and calf blastocysts were compared. No differences in survival rates were observed after vitrification of Day 8 expanded (52.4%) and hatched (50%) cow blastocysts or Day 8 expanded (54.5%) and hatched (59.4%) calf blastocysts. When embryos were vitrified on Day 7, survival rates of 78.4% and 66.7% were observed after warming expanded and hatched cow blastocysts, respectively, compared with rates of 80% and 76.9%, respectively, for calf blastocysts. Lowest survival rates were recorded for non-expanded blastocysts (26%-54%) compared with the other developmental stages, particularly those vitrified at Day 8 (</=40%). The DNA integrity index obtained after vitrification-warming was comparable to that for control fresh blastocysts, regardless of the length of embryo culture, the developmental stage of the embryo or the source of the oocytes. Our findings suggest that the cryotop vitrification method is particularly useful for the cryopreservation of blastocysts presenting with a high degree of expansion (expanded or hatched blastocysts), particularly when vitrification is performed after 7 days of in vitro embryo culture.


Theriogenology | 2010

Oocyte secreted factors improve embryo developmental competence of COCs from small follicles in prepubertal goats

R. Romaguera; Roser Morató; Ana-Raquel Jiménez-Macedo; M. G. Catalá; M. Roura; M.T. Paramio; M.J. Palomo; T. Mogas; D. Izquierdo

Oocytes secrete soluble paracrine factors called Oocyte Secreted Factors (OSFs) which regulate the cumulus cell phenotype. Follicle populations in ovaries from prepubertal females have smaller diameters than their adult counterparts. Oocytes from small follicles are less competent than those from large follicles. The aim of this study was to investigate, in prepubertal goats, the effect of OSFs secreted by denuded oocytes (DOs) from small (<3 mm) or large (>or=3 mm) follicles during IVM on embryo development and the blastocyst quality of cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) from small follicles and to determine if GDF9 participates in this process. Treatment groups were: (A) COCs non selected by their follicle size (control group); (B) cumulus oocytes complexes from small follicles (SFCOCs), (C) cumulus oocytes complexes from small follicles co-cultured with denuded oocytes from small follicles (SFCOCs + SFDOs), and (D) cumulus oocytes complexes from small follicles co-cultured with denuded oocytes from large follicles (SFCOCs + LFDOs). The effect of the addition of kinase inhibitor SB-431542, which antagonizes GDF9, was tested in A, C, and D treatment groups. Co-cultured SFCOCs with SFDOs or LFDOs significantly augmented the blastocyst rate in comparison to SFCOCs alone (15.77%, 17.39% vs. 10.31%, respectively). Blastocysts from SFCOCs + LFDOs group showed higher rates of tetraploid nuclei than blastocysts from SFCOCs and the control group (14.43% vs. 5.45% and 5.24%, respectively; P < 0.05). However, we did not observe differences in the hatching rate, mean cell number or embryo cryotolerance (P > 0.05) between the four treatment groups. The addition of SB-431542 during IVM did not have any effect on blastocyst rate (P > 0.05). In conclusion, in prepubertal goats, COCs with a low embryo developmental competence as a consequence of follicle size can be improved by coculturing them with denuded oocytes from both small and large follicles. GDF9 does not seem play a role in this improvement.


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 2008

Ultrastructure of bovine oocytes exposed to Taxol prior to OPS vitrification

Roser Morató; T. Mogas; Poul Maddox-Hyttel

Our objective was to document potential subcellular consequences of treatment with the microtubule stabilizer Taxol with or without subsequent vitrification of cow and calf oocytes by the open pulled straw (OPS) method. Oocytes were divided into four experimental groups for cows and four groups for calves: (1) a control group fixed immediately after maturation; (2) an OPS group cryopreserved by conventional OPS; (3) a Taxol/CPA group exposed to 1 μM Taxol and cryoprotective agents (CPAs); and (4) a Taxol/OPS group vitrified by OPS including 1 μM Taxol to the vitrification solution. All oocytes were processed for light and transmission electron microscopy. The main injuries were observed on the metaphase plate and the spindle. In control oocytes, the metaphase appeared as condensed chromosomes arranged in a well‐organized metaphase plate and the spindle showed well organized microtubules in both cow and calf oocytes. However, in cow OPS oocytes, the metaphase plate was disorganized into scattered chromosomes or the chromosomes were condensed into a single block of chromatin. In addition, microtubules were not organized as typical spindles. In contrast, cow Taxol/OPS oocytes as well as both cow and calf Taxol/CPAs oocytes showed well‐organized metaphase plates and normal spindle morphology. All calf OPS and calf Taxol/OPS oocytes displayed a single block of chromatin and no microtubules could be observed around the chromosomes. In conclusion, treatment with 1 µM Taxol before and during vitrification did not induce adverse changes in the oocyte cytoplasm or metaphase spindles in adult bovine oocytes, but stabilized the metaphase and spindle morphology. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 75: 1318–1326, 2008.

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D. Izquierdo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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M.T. Paramio

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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M.J. Palomo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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R. Romaguera

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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N. Arcarons

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Ana-Raquel Jiménez-Macedo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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B. Anguita

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Joan E. Rodríguez-Gil

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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T. Rigau

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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