March 31, 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
For more
information contact:
Rick Bogren, Louisiana State University Ag
Center, at rbogren@agcenter.lsu.edu
or 225-578-5839
Calves
from Decades-old Frozen Semen Born at LSU AgCenter
LSU AgCenter
scientists have produced calves from Angus bull semen that has been frozen for
more than 40 years.
Some of the
calves were sired by semen collected and frozen from bulls in the late 1960s,
said Robert Godke,
a professor of reproductive physiology at the LSU AgCenter.
ÒThese calves are
from frozen Angus bull semen stored in liquid nitrogen,Ó Godke said. The semen
was thawed, and beef cows were artificially inseminated at the LSU AgCenterÕs
Central Research Station.
Semen from 25
bulls — some now deceased — was collected, processed and stored in
liquid nitrogen in the 1960s and in succeeding years into the 2000s, said
Godke, who led the research team that conducted the study.
The frozen semen,
which came from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), was stored in the
USDA National Germplasm Conservatory — a sperm and embryo cryobank
— in Fort Collins, Colo., Godke said.
ÒWe believe these
normal, viable calves have been produced from some of the longest-stored frozen
semen ever reported in the scientific literature,Ó he said. ÒThis helps verify
that semen properly processed and stored can last for decades without losing
its ability to fertilize and produce viable offspring.Ó
David Carwell, an
LSU graduate student from Arkansas, was in charge of artificially inseminating
more than 200 cows. The results show that pregnancy rates were greater than 50
percent for semen from each decade, which indicates the stored samples
maintained their viability, Carwell said.
ÒWe are pleased
with these results,Ó said Glen Gentry,
a reproductive physiologist at the LSU AgCenterÕs Reproductive Biology Center
in Saint Gabriel. ÒThat is what one would expect with good-quality semen used
to inseminate synchronized cows with frozen-thawed semen stored in liquid
nitrogen for only a month.
ÒAll indications
are that the early scientists, who had proposed that properly frozen semen
stored in liquid nitrogen at minus-360 degrees would subsequently be viable for
many years, appear to have been correct,Ó Gentry said. ÒWeÕre happy to have had
the opportunity to use some of this long-term stored bull semen to verify what
was proposed by the theoretical scientists decades ago.Ó
Now that the
researchers have shown frozen semen can remain viable over extended times,
Gentry said he sees two positive effects for the beef and dairy industries.
ÒFirst, these
germplasm banks that are storing frozen semen have a product that we know will
work for livestock producers,Ó he said. ÒSecond, strides have been made in
genetics, and some small differences in DNA — single nucleotide
polymorphisms or SNPs — have been shown to be positive production
modifiers that can and likely will be used to increase animal production
performance.Ó
SNPs can act as
biological markers, helping scientists locate genes that are associated with a
variety of traits, such as growth, milk production and disease susceptibility.
ÒSome of the
older bulls in our joint USDA study may have had these SNPs, but science during
these animalsÕ lifetimes had not progressed enough to identify and take
advantage of the SNPs,Ó Gentry said. ÒNow, because we can use semen that was
stored years earlier, we could use that genetic material to identify production
traits and hopefully make improvements in our more modern cattle.Ó
For the long
term, Godke said, ÒThe valuable male sperm stored in the semen tanks will
produce babies for a long time.Ó
The first calf
produced from frozen and thawed semen in the United States was born in
Janesville, Wis., May 29, 1953.
ÒIt was just one of
many thousands that have come from frozen semen over the years,Ó Godke said.
ÒThis important finding was discovered by Dr. Chris Polge and his colleagues at
Cambridge University in England in the early 1950s.Ó
Polge was then
invited to the United States and shared his findings with colleagues in
Wisconsin, Godke said. ÒAnd this discovery subsequently changed cattle breeding
management and production efficiency for the years to come.Ó
Today, dairymen
can produce as much milk with half as many dairy cows as they did four decades
ago, said Ken Bondioli,
also a reproductive physiologist and member of the LSU AgCenter research team.
ÒThis is a result
good nutrition and genetic improvement through the genetic selection of bulls
to use in artificial insemination with frozen-thawed semen on their farms,Ó
Bondioli said. ÒWith frozen semen and artificial insemination, the top,
genetically proven bulls can be used to inseminate cows all over the world.Ó
Records verify
that insemination of dairy cattle with frozen semen has resulted in a marked
increase milk production per cow since the mid 1960s, he added.
ÒThis is an
excellent example where agricultural scientists have developed technologies
that have improved animal production efficiency for our livestock producers,Ó
Godke said.
ÒI am very
pleased to have had the opportunity to go to Cambridge and work with Dr. Polge
in my younger days at the LSU AgCenter,Ó he added. ÒHe was a very creative,
hard-working scientist. I think about him and the impact that his research has
made on producers when I see these calves produced by semen that has been
frozen for more than 40 years.Ó
— LSU Ag
Center