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Zinc as a possible causal factor in the sterilizing sperm tail defect, the 'Dag-defect', in Jersey bulls.
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1976
Year
SpermatogenesisFertilityGeneticsDag DefectSemen AnalysisReproductive BiologyJersey BullsFertilisationReproductive PhysiologySperm Tail DefectPublic HealthInfertilityGametePossible Causal FactorZinc ContentBiologyAnimal ReproductionAnimal ScienceMedicineSemen Samples
The zinc content was determined in semen samples from four young Danish Jersey bulls showing the typical 'Dag defect' (greater than 50% strongly coiled or bent sperm tails). Two of the bulls were half brothers. Semen samples from 14 normal fertile Jersey bulls served as controls. The normal material showed a zinc content in the centrifuged sperm of 190 +/- 15.8 mug/g d.w. and in the seminal plasma 81 +/- 31.2 mug/g d.w. In the four abnormal bulls the following elevated values were found: in the centrifuged sperm 310 +/- 109.5 mug/g d.w. and in the seminal plasma 137 +/- 75.2 mug/g d.w. (see figs. 1 and 2). One of the Dag defect's main localizations, the outer dense tail fibers, has a very high zinc content and this fact together with the heredity of the defect make further studies most promising.