VERTICAL THERMAL GRADIENT EQUIPMENT AND METHOD FOR PROGRESSIVE SPERM SORTING

20230399598 · 2023-12-14

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    This disclosure relates to an apparatus and method for sorting motile sperms from crude semen. the enrichment of a population of spermatozoa with capacitated spermatozoa can be achieved by providing a 1-to-4-degree vertical temperature difference in combination with the swim-up method.

    Claims

    1. An apparatus for processing sperm, comprising: an upper chamber and a bottom chamber arranged vertically; a collection port connected to the upper chamber; an injection port connected to the bottom chamber; a porous layer that placed at the interface between the upper and bottom chamber to allow particles communication between them and delay thermal equilibrium therebetween; and a temperature control unit means for maintaining the temperature of the upper chamber higher than that of the bottom chamber.

    2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the temperature control unit comprises a heating source to heat the upper chamber.

    3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the porous layer is a biocompatible semipermeable membrane.

    4. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein the biocompatible semipermeable membrane is a polycarbonate or polyvinyl alcohol track-etched membrane.

    5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the pore diameter of the porous layer is between 8 to 20 μm.

    6. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the upper chamber comprises an inclined ceiling, the lower end of the inclined ceiling is close to the collection port and the higher end of inclined ceiling is away from the collection port.

    7. The apparatus of claim 6, wherein the inclined ceiling comprises a strip vent at the higher end to release air bubbles.

    8. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the inclined ceiling comprises a plurality of through-holes to ventilate the upper chamber.

    9. A method for processing sperm using the apparatus of claim 1, comprising: a) providing an apparatus of claim 1; b) injecting a population of unsorted sperm into the bottom chamber through the injection port; c) injecting a compatible buffer into the upper chamber through the collection port; d) maintaining the temperature of the upper chamber higher than that of the bottom chamber; e) incubating a period; f) harvesting a population of sorted sperm from upper chamber through the collection port.

    10. The method of claim 9, wherein the temperature control unit comprises a heating source in thermal contact with the upper chamber.

    11. The method of claim 9, wherein the temperature of the upper chamber higher than that of the bottom is maintained between 1 to 4° C.

    12. The method of claim 11, wherein the temperatures of the upper and bottom chambers are maintained between 35 to 38° C. and 30 to 36° C., respectively.

    13. The method of claim 9, wherein the period is between 15 to 30 minutes.

    14. The method of claim 9, wherein the compatible buffer is a bicarbonate or HEPES buffered sperm washing medium.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0023] FIG. 1 is the schematic illustration of the device design and working principle. There is one injection port (11) for injecting the raw semen sample and one collection port (21) for the buffer injection and collection of purified spermatozoa. The upper chamber (20) and bottom chamber (10) are separated by a porous layer (30). A temperature control unit (400) was mounted to generate a vertical temperature gradient, making the temperature of the upper chamber (20) higher than that of the bottom chamber (10).

    [0024] FIG. 2 is the schematic illustration of the device design and working principle. There is one injection port (11) for injecting the raw semen sample and one collection port (21) for the buffer injection and collection of sorted spermatozoa. The upper chamber (20) and the bottom chamber (10) are separated by a porous layer (30). To generate a vertical temperature gradient, the temperature control unit (400) can be a heating source (410) such as a mild heating pad or a hand-warming device. The heating source (410) heats the buffer in the upper chamber (20) by contacting (e.g., being placed on) the upper chamber (20).

    [0025] FIG. 3 depicts an example of a vertical temperature gradient device.

    [0026] FIG. 4 shows the temperature difference between the upper chamber (20) and bottom chamber (10) in the presence or absence a porous layer (30) when providing the heat source (410) on the top of the device, in the device with a membrane the ΔT is approximately 4° C.; but in the device without a membrane, the ΔT is approximately 0.8° C.

    [0027] FIGS. 5A-5C show spermatozoa sorting with or without a temperature (tm) gradient system. (A) The concentration of sperms (/mL) after sorting. (B) The percentage of progressive sperm (PR) recovery rate (the total motile sperm on top chamber divided the number of motile sperm in the raw stock semen sample). (C) The percentage of the PR sperm before and after sorting by a thermal gradient system or without temperature gradient system (Each point represents the measuring result from the one subject of the experiment).

    [0028] FIGS. 6A-6C show the sperm parameters of raw semen and sorting with or without temperature gradient. Comparison of the sperm parameters after sorting by the present invention with and without temperature gradient. (A) VAP: average path velocity, (B) VSL: straight-line velocity, (C) VCL: curvilinear velocity.

    [0029] FIGS. 7A-7B show the sperm DNA fragmentation in processed fraction. Immunostaining of spermatozoa with TUNEL assay. Sperm sorting by the present invention reduced DNA fragmentation.

    [0030] FIGS. 8A-8E are the schematic illustrations of the present invention for sorting functional human sperm. (A) top view, (B) cross-sectional view of upper chamber; (C) top view, (D) cross-sectional view of bottom chamber; (E) assembly device.

    [0031] FIGS. 9A-9B show sorting with the present invention with plurality of through-holes reduced immotile sperm after sorting. The upper chamber was designed with plurality of through-holes and examined sperm recovery after sorting.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    [0032] All the features disclosed in this specification may be combined in any combination. An alternative feature serving the same, equivalent, or similar purpose may replace each feature disclosed in this specification. Thus, unless expressly stated otherwise, each feature disclosed is only an example of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.

    [0033] Device Fabrication

    [0034] As shown in FIG. 1, the device provided herein generally comprises a bottom chamber (10) and an upper chamber (20) for semen sample deposits and the collection of sorted spermatozoa, respectively. The bottom chamber (10) has an injection port (11) for sample injection, while the upper chamber has a collection port (21) for loading buffer and harvesting sorted spermatozoa. A temperature control unit (400) is utilized to maintain the temperature of the upper chamber (20) higher than that of the bottom chamber (10). A porous layer (30) with a typical pore diameter of 8 to 20 μm was placed between two main chambers which could help to maintain the temperature gradient as well as allow motile sperm to travel from the bottom chamber (10) to the upper chamber (20).

    [0035] Typically, the temperature difference between the upper chamber (20) and the bottom chamber (10) is maintained to be 1-4° C., for example, the temperatures of the upper chamber (20) and bottom chamber (10) were kept at 35-38° C. and 30-36° C., respectively. During the operation, the motile sperm (50) gradually accumulate in the upper chamber (20), while the immotile sperm (60) stay in the bottom chamber (10). Examples of the temperature control unit (400) can be a heating pad (410), a thermal gradient incubator (420), or simply a pre-warmed metal sheet.

    [0036] A heating source such as a heating pad (410) or a pre-warmed metal sheet warms the fluid inside by contacting the outer walls of the upper chamber. The heating pad (410) is set to maintain a temperature. The pre-warmed metal sheet pre-warmed to a temperature before operation. Preferably, the said temperatures are slightly higher than the desired temperature of the fluid in the upper chamber.

    [0037] A thermal gradient incubator (420) is designed to provide the heat from the one end of the heating source (421). The other side is either subjected to free cooling by providing a plurality of holes (422) of the thermal gradient incubator.

    [0038] The porous layer (30) separating the upper and lower chambers not only concentrates the spermatozoa swum-up against gravity (50) in the upper chamber (20) and leaves immotile spermatozoa (60) in the bottom chamber (10), but also delays the thermal equilibrium of the upper and bottom chambers. Typically, the porous layer (30) is a biocompatible membrane, either hydrophobic or hydrophilic. In some embodiments, the biocompatible membrane is a polycarbonate track-etched membrane or a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) membrane.

    [0039] Human Sperm Handling and Sperm Sorting

    [0040] Human semen samples were obtained from donors after 3 days of sexual abstinence. Informed consent was obtained from each donor. After obtaining semen samples from the hospital, liquefied-semen samples were then analyzed by LensHooke X1 pro (bonraybio). Subsequently, a semen sample was split into two fractions for sperm sorting in the presence and absence of temperature gradient condition. Spermatozoa were separated from crude semen by the present invention. Briefly, a semen sample of 1.5˜2 mL was injected into the bottom of the device; the upper part of the device was filled with 1˜1.5 mL of sperm washing medium (mHTF medium). Recovered sperms were collected after 15 to 30 minutes incubation in the presence or absence of heating pad. Forty microliters of recovery samples were placed on a LensHooke CS0 chip (bonraybio) and analyzed with LensHooke X1 pro (bonraybio).

    [0041] Immunofluorescence Staining

    [0042] To compare the quality of spermatozoa before and after sorting, approximately 2×10.sup.6 spermatozoa were centrifuged at 400 g for 7 minutes and resuspended in PBS containing 4% of paraformaldehyde. After fixation, the samples were centrifuged and washed with PBS twice, and then resuspended in PBS at 200 μL. Fixed cells were then aliquoted and smeared onto a glass microscope slide and left to dry. The air-dried slides can be placed into storage at −80° C. or performed immunofluorescence staining directly. The assessment of sperm DNA fragmentation (sDF) in spermatozoa was evaluated by using with TUNEL assay.

    Example 1: Vertical Thermal Gradient Establishment

    [0043] In this and the following examples, the temperature control unit (400) comprises a heating source (410) in thermal contact with the outer wall of the upper chamber (20) to generate a temperature gradient between the upper and bottom chambers, and the porous layer (30) is a polycarbonate track-etched membrane filter. A vertical thermal gradient system was set up as described in FIG. 2, the temperature of the mild heat source was detected by an Infrared thermal imager (MT-4606, Proskit). Inserting the porous PCTE membrane not only allows motile sperm to pass through from the bottom chamber to the upper chamber but also has the direct benefit of enhancing the temperature gradient as illustrated in FIG. 4. The result showed that the average temperature difference between the upper and bottom chamber in the presence and absence of membrane were determined at the range of 3.80˜4.97° C. and 0.73˜1.10° C. in 30 minutes, respectively. Temperature gradient was effective in the whole measured range. The results suggest that placing the porous layer (30) between the sorting device can maintain a temperature gradient of at least 3° C. Compared with the prior horizontal temperature-gradient system for spermatozoa isolation, the temperature gradient can be achieved in a space of only 4 mm (4 mm for the upper chamber, 4 mm for the bottom chamber), and only a simple heating source is required.

    Example 2 Sperm Motility, Concentration, and Isolation Efficiency

    [0044] The improvement of sperm sorting with a vertical thermal gradient system was assessed in parallel to sperm sorting without a vertical thermal gradient system. Once the sperm was collected from the upper chamber (20), we analyzed the concentration, motility as well as sperm parameters by CASA (LensHooke X1 pro bonraybio). As shown in FIG. 5, sperm sorting utilizing a vertical thermal gradient exhibited an increase in total sperm counts compared to sperm sorting at a uniform temperature, with an increase of approximately 1.86- to 6-fold (FIG. 5A).

    [0045] In FIG. 5B, the recovery rate of progressive sperm (PR sperm) was increased approximately two- to four-fold in the sperm sorting with a vertical thermal gradient as compared with control (sorting with uniform temperature). Importantly, these results also demonstrated that the vertical thermal gradient system provides a higher percentage of PR sperm (96±4.86%) as compared with the uniform temperature system (89.27±12.71%) and unsorted sample (54±16.84%).

    Example 3 Sperm Velocity Analysis

    [0046] The sperms and moving paths of the sorted sperm were tracked by the computer-aided sperm analysis (LensHooke X1 pro bonraybio), as shown in FIGS. 6 (A-C). The thermotaxis-sorted sperm showed a series of velocity parameters significantly higher than that of the raw sperm sample. The values of VAP, VSL, and VCL tend to increase in the vertical thermal gradient system, suggesting that sperm that responded to temperature gradient possess better velocity parameters.

    Example 4 Quality of Thermostatic Spermatozoa

    [0047] To assess the genetic quality of spermatozoa selected by thermotaxis, we examined DNA fragmentation level after sorting with our vertical sorting system by TUNEL assay. As shown in FIGS. 7, the TUNEL index in spermatozoa after being selected by a vertical thermal gradient system was reduced to almost 0% as compared to the unselected sample.

    Example 5 the Upper Chamber with Plurality of Through-Holes Reduced Immotile Cell Number after Sorting

    [0048] Bubbles were frequently observed when injecting buffer into the upper chamber (20). Sloping the ceiling of the upper chamber (20) and deploying a strip vent (22) at the higher end of the slope was found helpful to improve the situation. The bubbles arise during buffer injection contact the ceiling, move along the slope, and finally release through the strip vent (22). On the other hand, further disposing a plurality of through-holes (23) on the ceiling can relieve the negative pressure generated in the upper chamber (20) when collecting the sorted sperm through the collection port (21). FIGS. 8A and 8B exemplify one of embodiments to achieve the above objectives.

    [0049] The performance of the devices with or without through-holes (23) in sperm sorting was compared at a uniform temperature (37° C.), as shown in FIG. 9, the sorting device with through-holes (23) reduced immotile cell number after sorting. The result indicates that increasing number of through-holes (23) on the ceiling is effective ways to reduce the number of immotile sperm when performing sperm sorting.

    [0050] This invention imitates the avigation mechanism of spermatozoa in the female genital tract, it could be used as a tool in the ART setting to select the best spermatozoa as human spermatozoa after capacitation responds positively to a temperature gradient change.

    [0051] From the above description, one skilled in the art can easily ascertain the essential characteristics of the present invention, and without departing from the spirit and scope thereof, can make various changes and modifications of the invention to adapt it to various usages and conditions. Thus, other embodiments are also within the scope of the following claims.