Hot topics: australia, sport, disasters-and-accidents, floods, vic, nsw, emergency-incidents, rugby-league, nrl, united-states

Maths solves sperm movement mystery

By Stephen Pincock for ABC Science Online

Updated July 30, 2010 16:14:00

Sperm swimming towards an egg

Researchers say various factors work together to accumulate sperm near surfaces (www.sxc.hu)

UK scientists may have unravelled one of the long-standing mysteries of human fertility: why sperm cells tend to behave like tiny, surface-seeking missiles.

Researchers have known for more than 40 years that sperm cells in a drop of fluid tend to congregate at a specific distance from the surfaces where the fluid meets solid objects like microscope slides. Exactly why has long been a puzzle.

Now UK mathematicians Dr David Smith and Professor John Blake at the University of Birmingham think they have figured out what is going on.

Their results, published on the pre-press website arXiv.org and in the journal The Mathematical Scientist, are based on a mathematical model of a swimming sperm cell.

The researchers say that various factors work together to accumulate sperm near surfaces.

One factor is a weak fluid dynamic force that pulls the cells towards the surface.

Acting against that, however, is the fact that the tails of sperm cells tend to end up closer to the surface than the head, which causes the sperm to swim away from the surface.

Another factor is the thrashing motion of the sperm's tail, or flagellum, which gives it a pitching motion as it swims, causing it to swim first away from and then towards a surface.

When the researchers simulated the effect of these forces over long periods of time, they found that a sperm's swimming trajectory would always tend towards a specific distance from the surface.

"The surface does not simply attract the cell; it causes alternate pitching towards and away from the surface that steers the cell to this finite distance," the researchers said.

Infertility

One in six Australian couples suffer infertility and male factors are thought to be the cause of half that problem.

Andrology Australia director and fertility expert Professor Rob McLachlan says that one of those factors is the way the sperm moves.

"We understand that problems with motility [the way a sperm moves] are a major factor, and often go along with poor sperm shape and low sperm number," he said.

Mr McLachlan says, while the new findings might not have an immediate impact on how infertility is treated, a better understanding of how sperm move is likely to be of benefit in the longer term.

"Understanding the process of normal sperm motility will help us unravel motility problems in infertile men and impact on clinical practice in the future," he said.

"Such basic science often pays real dividends."

Tags: health, reproduction-and-contraception, fertility-and-infertility, sexual-health, mathematics, anatomy, australia, united-kingdom

First posted July 30, 2010 15:51:00

ABC News Online Investigative Unit

The ABC News Online Investigative Unit encourages whistleblowers, and others with access to information they believe should be revealed for the public good, to contact us.

  1. An Iranian opposition supporter gestures next to a burning police motorcycle Won't be silenced

    Anti-government protesters in Iran are using music to continue their dissent against the hardline regime.

  2. Former banker takes the cake Video Taking the cake

    After 11 years working on Wall Street, an investment banker trades her job for a humble cupcake.

  3. Exhibition shows off Rolling Stone covers Video Rolling along

    Hundreds of Rolling Stone magazine covers are on exhibition in Brisbane, spanning four decades of popular culture.

  4. A rainbow forms over one of the monumental statues (moai) on Easter Island Week in photos

    A look back over what's been making news in the past week, told in pictures.