Animal Science, Department of

 

Department of Animal Science: Faculty Publications

Dietary Arginine Supplementation Modulates the Proteome of Boar Seminal Plasma

ORCID IDs

Oladejo https://orcid.org/0009-0004-9216-2775

Mote https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2234-8844

Liao https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5447-0580

Feugang https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1376-5059

Document Type

Article

Date of this Version

2025

Citation

Animals (2025) 15: 555

doi: 10.3390/ani1504555

Comments

Open access

License: CC BY 4.0

Abstract

This study investigated the impact of an increased arginine (ARG) level in a boar diet on semen production, sperm quality, and seminal plasma proteome. Adult Nebraska Index Line boars were assigned to two groups, one receiving a control diet with 0.77% arginine (n = 4) and the other a high-arginine diet with 1.77% arginine (n = 5). Semen was collected twice a week over the whole experiment, including one week before, six weeks during, and six weeks after the supplementation. Parameters such as semen volume and concentration were assessed immediately after collection, alongside sperm motility and morphology. Centrifugation of raw semen samples yielded seminal plasma for a gel-based proteome analysis. The seminal plasma proteins were extracted, quantified, and separated via 2D gel electrophoresis, allowing protein identification through mass spectrometry. Data analysis involved two-way ANOVA for comparisons (p < 0.05). Results showed that arginine supplementation improved semen volume and total sperm counts, with averages of 21 ± 3 doses in the control group versus 24 ± 2 in the ARG group (p = 0.05). Although sperm motility and morphology remained unaffected (p > 0.05), dietary arginine upregulated ten proteins and downregulated two. In summary, increased dietary arginine did not significantly alter key parameters of semen output or sperm quality but significantly impacted seminal plasma proteome, warranting further research on sperm viability.

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