Effect of aerobic exercise, low-fat and high-fat diet on the testis tissue and sperm parameters in obese and nonobese mice model.
Arezou NematollahiFatemeh KazeminasabMarziyeh TavalaeeSayed M MarandiKamran GhaediMohammad N NazemMohammad Hossein Nasr-EsfahaniPublished in: Andrologia (2019)
Semen quality and male fertility depend on numerous factors such as age, environment, lifestyle, physical activity, genetic background and occupation. We aimed to access the effect of aerobic exercise, low- and high-fat diet on mice testis tissue, and sperm function. Obese and nonobese male mice C57BL/6 were exposed to high fat (Hf) or low fat (Lf) and/or activity (Exe: exercise or Sed: sedentary). Finally, testicular morphometric characteristics, sperm concentration and motility (light microscopy), sperm morphology (eosin/nigrosin dye), lipid peroxidation (BODIPY C11 Probe), chromatin (acridine orange and chromomycin A3 staining) were compared within obese groups (Hf/Exe, Lf/Exe, Lf/Sed, Hf/Sed) and nonobese groups (Hf/Exe, Lf/Exe, Lf/Sed, Hf/Sed). Both exercise and diet interventions did not show any alteration in testicular morphological characteristics, sperm morphology and DNA fragmentation within both obese and nonobese groups (p > 0.05). Exercise and/or diet resulted in a significant increase in sperm concentration and motility within both groups (p < 0.05). Exercise in both groups leads to high percentage of lipid peroxidation (p < 0.05). Exercise intervention significantly improved sperm protamine deficiency within obese group (p < 0.05). We concluded that exercise intervention was more effective than diet in improvement of sperm function within obese groups.
Keyphrases
- physical activity
- adipose tissue
- high fat diet
- weight loss
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- high intensity
- bariatric surgery
- obese patients
- type diabetes
- randomized controlled trial
- resistance training
- acute heart failure
- sleep quality
- high fat diet induced
- gene expression
- fatty acid
- heart failure
- germ cell
- single molecule
- skeletal muscle
- highly efficient
- mass spectrometry
- body composition
- dna methylation
- living cells
- cardiovascular disease
- cell free
- copy number
- cystic fibrosis
- atrial fibrillation
- circulating tumor
- nucleic acid
- staphylococcus aureus