Male Astyanax mexicanus (blind cave fish). Credit: Richard Borowsky, New York University

The behavior of sperm cells is due, in part, to the individual DNA make-up of these cells, rather than only to the genetics of males, finds a team of scientists. Its results, which provide a new understanding of the competition among sperm cells to fertilize the egg, have larger implications for the reproductive process.

The study, which centers on the swimming behavior of , is the first to establish a direct effect of mutation on sperm behavior and suggests that the development and application of screens based on sperm behavior can improve the quality of the genetics they carry.

"Until now, the predominant view was that this variation in swimming behavior reflected the overall genetics of the male rather than the variable genetics of the individual sperm ," explains Richard Borowsky, a professor emeritus in NYU's Department of Biology and the senior author of the paper, which appears in the journal Scientific Reports. "This study is the first to demonstrate that can directly affect the swimming behavior of sperm cells."

This fuller grasp, he adds, may offer additional knowledge on the impact of abnormal sperm cells on , notably .

The work , which included Haining Chen, an NYU graduate student at the time of the study and now at Westlake University in Hangzhou, China, focused on sperm cells in male fish—specifically Astyanax mexicanus cave fish. It compared the sperm cells in normal fish with those of fish whose sperm production had been artificially mutated. This allowed the scientists to identify behavioral and potentially altering the sperm's chances in the race to fertilize the egg.

Paths of individual swimming sperm over a one-second interval, illustrating the great variation among individual sperm in swimming velocity and curvature. Credit: Richard Borowsky, New York University

Their results showed no difference in flagellar length— the hair-like appendage that propels them as they swim towards the egg—between the normal and mutated samples. However, there was greater variability in the velocity, or swimming speed, of the mutated samples compared to the normal ones—meaning that in many instances, the mutated samples swam at lower and faster speeds than did normal ones. Overall, while both types of sperm cells appeared similar, their behaviors are quite different and at crucial stages.

The findings offer additional insights into the nature of reproduction.

It's been long established that sperm from different males vary in their characteristics because of the genetic differences between the males. This study established that different from the same male vary in their characteristics because they differ in their genetic cargo.

More information: Mutagenesis alters sperm swimming velocity in Astyanax cave fish, Scientific Reports (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-22486-5

Journal information: Scientific Reports