AJARCDE (Asian Journal of Applied Research for Community Development and Empowerment)
Vol. 9 No. 2 (2025)

The Role of Glucose and Fructose for the Energy Recovery of Washed Boer Buck Spermatozoa

I Wayan Lanus Sumadiasa (Reproduction Laboratory, Faculty of Animal Science, University of Mataram, Majapahit Street Number 62, Mataram Lombok, 83125, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia)
Aminurrahman Aminurrahman (Reproduction Laboratory, Faculty of Animal Science, University of Mataram, Majapahit Street Number 62, Mataram Lombok, 83125, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia)
Lukman HY Lukman HY (Reproduction Laboratory, Faculty of Animal Science, University of Mataram, Majapahit Street Number 62, Mataram Lombok, 83125, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia)
Rodiah Rodiah (Reproduction Laboratory, Faculty of Animal Science, University of Mataram, Majapahit Street Number 62, Mataram Lombok, 83125, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia)
Enny Yuliani (Reproduction Laboratory, Faculty of Animal Science, University of Mataram, Majapahit Street Number 62, Mataram Lombok, 83125, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia)
Lalu Ahmad Zaenuri (Reproduction Laboratory, Faculty of Animal Science, University of Mataram, Majapahit Street Number 62, Mataram Lombok, 83125, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia)
Ilhamsyah Ilhamsyah (Reproduction Laboratory, Faculty of Animal Science, University of Mataram, Majapahit Street Number 62, Mataram Lombok, 83125, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 May 2025

Abstract

Semen contains various biochemical substances, both beneficial for life functions and toxic substances that can damage spermatozoa, such as metabolic wastes and free radicals. Semen washing will optimize spermatozoa fertility, as harmful substances and the main energy source are removed. Therefore, giving fructose or glucose is necessary for energy recovery. The washed Boer Bucks semen was stored in Tris-egg yolk (TEY) without glucose or fructose (T1), TEY plus 1% glucose (TEYG, T2), and TEY plus 1% fructose (TEYF, T3). Each treatment was repeated 5 times to observe motility, viability, abnormalities, and intact plasma membrane (IPM) spermatozoa. We analyzed the data using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and the SPSS-20 application. In 8 hours of storage, the results indicated that the average motility of spermatozoa in T1, T2, and T3 was 42.00 ± 1.67%, 44.33 ± 2.88%, and 49.00 ± 2.53%. The viability percentages were 45.67 ± 1.21%, 48.00 ± 1.41%, and 53.50 ± 2.59%, while the abnormality percentages were 15.33 ± 0.52%, 14.50 ± 1.05%, and 12.17 ± 1.17%. The IPM was 42.67 ± 1.21%, 44.50 ± 1.05%, and 49.33 ± 1.75%. In conclusion, glucose or fructose can maintain the quality of spermatozoa post-washed, with the best quality obtained from 1% fructose/100 ml of diluent. Contribution to Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs):SDG 2: Zero HungerSDG 12: Responsible Consumption and Production

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Journal Info

Abbrev

ajarcde

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry Earth & Planetary Sciences Education Energy Environmental Science

Description

AJARCDE (Asian Journal of Applied Research for Community Development and Empowerment) publishes papers on innovative applications, development of new technologies, and efficient solutions in agriculture, engineering, computing, economic, social, information technology, food, energy, and scientific ...