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Sexed Semen and Artificial Insemination a Winning Combination in Horse Breeding
The Morgan Connection
December 1999
FORT COLLINS, CO-Four new foals are leading the field in the race to develop insemination techniques that could
forever change the face of the multibillion-dollar international horse-breeding industry.
XY Inc., a Colorado biotech company, has announced the birth of the world's first
foals to be born from mares impregnated via artificial insemination and low-dose sexed-semen.
"To achieve pregnancy in horses using artificial insemination and low-dose
sexed-semen is a major breakthrough in the highly complex process of horse breeding," said Dr. Mervyn Jacobson, chief
executive officer of XY. "The fact no surgical intervention was required makes these births even more important."
XY expects in the coming years to commercialize the technique that combines AI
with low-dose sexed semen, Jacobson added.
Currently, in horses the success of artificial insemination with sexed semen lags
far behind the success already achieved in cattle because of the horse's complex reproductive biology and the
incredibly high number of sperm - typically 500 million - needed to impregnate a mare.
The four foals, born between July 15 and August 8, were conceived using sperm
dosages of just 25 million sperm, that is, 5 percent of the dosage regarded until now as necessary for AI
impregnation of horses.
The first two foals, both fillies, were born July 15 within an hour of one another;
hence their names "Julietta," in honor of the month and "Juno," for the Roman goddess celebrated by ancients on July
15.
The third foal, "Augustus Primus," a male, was born on August 1 and was named in
tribute to the month and day of his birth. The fourth foal, a purebred Arabian male, was born August 8. His name "Al
Barak," is a variation of the name of Mohammed's winged horse.
XY researchers have made rapid progress since 1998 when they successfully combined
surgical techniques and sexed semen to produce "Call Me Madam," the first horse in the world to have her sex selected
prior to conception.
"Our research breakthrough last year indicated equine sperm can survive the
semen-sorting procedure," Jacobson explained. "However," he added, "complicated surgical techniques simply are not
acceptable to horse breeders. First and foremost, breeders want a reliable AI method that produces live foals. Giving
breeders the additional possibility of selecting the sex of the foal is a dream come true for them."
While the historic 1999 births of the four foals signal low-dose sexed sperm and
AI can work in horses, there other "firsts" also were achieved: the first filly and the first colt to have their
sex predetermined using AI combined with sexed semen, and the first purebred, an Arabian, to be conceived using the
technique.
AI using low-dose sorted sperm has the potential to develop a new lucrative
multimillion-dollar enterprise for the horse industry. In 1994 alone, U.S. horse breeders reported $548 million in
stud fees. That same year, breeders reported receiving more than $3 billion in proceeds from horse sales.
Applications of AI using advanced sperm sorting could be in excess of $300 million a year for the U.S. horse industry alone, said Jacobson. The market outside the U.S. could more than double those projections, he added.
XY, which holds exclusive global rights to the license for sperm surfing by flow cytometry all non-human mammals,
was formed as a joint venture of the Colorado State University Research Foundation and Cytomation, lnc., of Fort
Collins, Colorado.
Founded in May of 1996, XY's original mission was to provide semen-sexing service
to the U.S. cattle industry. With the appointment of Jacobson in January 1997, XY's mission expanded also to include
horses, pigs and endangered species, specifically, and all non-human mammals, potentially.
The breakthrough science of AI combined with low-dose sexed semen and its
application to horses was developed by XY scientists in conjunction with three other respected research teams at
Colorado State University, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Cytomation.
Colorado State researchers discovered how to make female animals pregnant with
unusually low doses of sperm. USDA researchers developed and patented the technology that allows sperm to be sorted
by flow cytometry. Cytomation built the computerized device - MoFlo - to speed the sorting process. XY scientists
perform sperm sorting that allows XY to dictate the sex of horses, cows and other animals before artificial
insemination occurs.
"The births of these lovely foals is justification to go forward with additional
development work to bring to market these sex-selection breeding techniques for horses." Jacobson noted.
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