SARATOV FALL MEETING SFM 

© 2024 All Rights Reserved

Tracking spermatozoa movement toward the egg with functional Optical Coherence Tomography

Tian Xia1, Kohei Umezu1, Shang Wang2, Irina Larina1,*

1Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Baylor College of Medicine,
Houston, TX 77030, USA
2Biomedical Engineering, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, NJ 07030, USA

Abstract

Fertilization is a critical reproductive step combining two gametes from parents, the egg and the sperm, to convey the genetic information to the next generation. This process is regulated in vivo by multiple factors influencing a selection of one sperm out of millions. However, due to the lack of suitable visualization approaches for in-vivo fertilization processes, most of the current knowledge is derived from in vitro experiments, which cannot model the complexity of the physiological states. The overall goal of this project is to capture the fertilization in vivo in a mouse model and to characterize the mechanisms regulating the dynamics of this process. Toward this goal, we recently established functional optical coherence tomography (OCT) integrated with intravital microscopy for live dynamic imaging of reproductive dynamics within the mouse fallopian tube. This method allowed for prolonged volumetric tracking of oocytes and embryos as well as individual spermatozoa at the site of fertilization based on their trajectories. However, visualizing the fertilization event remains a major challenge because the oocytes prior to fertilization are surrounded by a dense cloud of cumulus cells, forming cumulus-oocyte-complex (COC), making direct sperm tracking through the optically dense cumulus matrix not feasible. This study presents the development of the speckle variance (SV) OCT analysis for volumetric tracking of sperm migration through the cumulus matrix toward the oocyte in vitro. Potentially, this method will be integrated with in-vivo intravital OCT imaging to capture the process of mammalian fertilization in vivo.

Speaker

Tian Xia
Baylor college of medicine
United States

Discussion

Ask question