Issue 20, 2024

High-throughput selection of sperm with improved DNA integrity and rapidly progressive motility using a butterfly-shaped chip compared to the swim-up method

Abstract

Microfluidics provides unique opportunities for the high throughput selection of motile sperm with improved DNA integrity for assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). Here, through a parametric study on dimensions and geometrical angles, a butterfly-shaped chip (BSC) is presented to isolate sperm with high progressive motility and intact DNA at a separation rate of 1125 sperm per minute. Using finite element simulations, the flow field and shear rates in the device were optimized to leverage the inherent motility characteristics of sperm for maximum selection throughput. The device incorporates a triple selection mechanism in series, initially activating sperm rheotaxis by rotation against the semen flow, penetrating the counter buffer flow and swimming against the direction of the buffer flow, leaving dead cells and debris behind, and subsequently leveraging boundary-following behavior to direct progressively motile sperm to swim along the walls and reach the device outlet. The device selects over 4.1 million sperm per mL within 20 minutes, with 29.2%, 68.2%, and 57.3% improvement in total motility, DNA integrity, and velocity parameter (VCL), as compared with the conventional swim-up method, respectively. Overall, the performance of the device to separate sperm with approximately 95.9% total motility, 97.8% viability, and 96.6% DNA integrity at high concentrations demonstrates its potential for enhancing the efficiency of conventional treatment methods.

Graphical abstract: High-throughput selection of sperm with improved DNA integrity and rapidly progressive motility using a butterfly-shaped chip compared to the swim-up method

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Jun 2024
Accepted
17 Sep 2024
First published
24 Sep 2024

Lab Chip, 2024,24, 4907-4917

High-throughput selection of sperm with improved DNA integrity and rapidly progressive motility using a butterfly-shaped chip compared to the swim-up method

A. Sharafatdoust Asl, M. Zabetian Targhi, S. Zeaei, I. Halvaei and R. Nosrati, Lab Chip, 2024, 24, 4907 DOI: 10.1039/D4LC00506F

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