Background
Procedures to detect sperm DNA fragmentation (SDF), like the sperm chromatin dispersion (SCD) test, determine the “global” SDF without discriminating between spermatozoa with single‐strand DNA breaks only (SDF‐SSBs) and those containing double‐strand DNA breaks (SDF‐DSBs).
Objectives
(a) To validate a test to distinguish human spermatozoa with massive DSBs (DSB‐SCD assay), (b) to study the baseline SDF‐SSBs and SDF‐DSBs, and (c) to assess their dynamics in vitro.
Materials and methods
(a) SDF‐DSBs were determined by visualization of diffused DNA fragments from spermatozoa lysed under non‐denaturing conditions. This was validated by in vitro incubation with DNase I and the comet assay. (b) Baseline SDF‐DSBs and SDF‐SSBs were determined in ejaculates from 95 males. (c) Their dynamic appearance was studied in samples untreated or exposed to hyperthermia, acidic pH, nitric oxide released by sodium nitroprusside (SNP), and the metabolic energy inhibitors 2‐deoxy‐D‐glucose and antimycin A.
Results
(a) DNase I and comet assay experiments confirmed that the assay successfully determined SDF‐DSBs. (b) The higher the SDF of the semen sample, the higher the frequency of SSBs, whereas DSBs behaved independently. Abnormal samples showed higher SDF than normozoospermic, the difference being only significant for SDF‐SSBs. (c) During the first hours of incubation, the linear rate of increase in SDF‐SSBs was 3.7 X higher than that of SDF‐DSBs. All hazardous agents accelerated the SDF rate when compared to untreated spermatozoa, primarily being associated with SDF‐SSBs. SNP treatment was the most damaging, rapidly inducing spermatozoa with SSBs which progressively evolved to DSBs. Remarkably, this phenomenon was also evidenced after acute SNP exposure, revealing cryptic sperm damage.
Conclusion
The DSBs‐SCD is an easy complement for SDF assessment. The dynamic study of SSBs and DSBs may improve the evaluation of sperm quality in clinical settings, particularly “unmasking” the presence of non‐specific cryptic sperm damage that might otherwise go undetected.