London: Men please take note. If you want to preserve the qaulity of your sperm make sure you don't regularly eat a diet rich in sugar, says a new research adding that sperm are influenced by diet, and the effects arise rapidly.
The study, published in the journal PLOS Biology, gives new insight into the function of sperm and may, in the long term, contribute to new diagnostic methods to measure sperm quality.
"We see that diet influences the motility of the sperm, and we can link the changes to specific molecules in them. Our study has revealed rapid effects that are noticeable after one to two weeks", said study lead author Anita Ost from the Linkoping University in Sweden.
According to the researchers, sperm quality can be harmed by several environmental and lifestyle factors, of which obesity and related diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, are well-known risk factors for poor sperm quality.
The research group that carried out the new study is interested in epigenetic phenomena, which involve physical properties or levels of gene expression changing, even when the genetic material, the DNA sequence, is not changed.
In certain cases such epigenetic changes can lead to properties being transferred from a parent to offspring via the sperm or the egg.
In a previous study, the researchers showed that male fruit flies which had consumed excess sugar shortly before mating more often produced offspring who became overweight.
Similar studies on mice have suggested that small fragments of RNA known as tsRNA play a significant role in these epigenetic phenomena that appear in the next generation.
These RNA fragments are present in unusually large amounts in the sperm of many species, including humans, fruit flies and mice.
This study was initiated by the researchers to investigate whether a high consumption of sugar affects the RNA fragments in human sperm.
The research examined 15 normal, non-smoking young men, who followed a diet in which they were given all food from the scientists for two weeks.
The diet was based on the Nordic Nutrition Recommendations for healthy eating with one exception: during the second week the researchers added sugar, corresponding to around 3.5 litres of fizzy drinks, or 450 grammes of confectionery, every day.
The sperm quality and other indicators of the participants' health were investigated at the start of the study, after the first week (during which they ate a healthy diet), and after the second week (when the participants had additionally consumed large amounts of sugar).
At the beginning of the study, one third of the participants had low sperm motility.
Motility is one of several factors that influence sperm quality, and the fraction of people with low sperm motility in the study corresponded to that in the general population.
The researchers were surprised to discover that the sperm motility of all participants became normal during the study.
"The study shows that sperm motility can be changed in a short period, and seems to be closely coupled to diet. This has important clinical implications," said Anita Ost.
The researchers also found that the small RNA fragments, which are linked to sperm motility, also changed.
For all the latest News, Opinions and Views, download ummid.com App.
Select Language To Read in Urdu, Hindi, Marathi or Arabic.
"Just Say Persecuted Minorities": Expert had warned govt against naming religions in CAA
Also Read
'Tools To Divide The Society': Chorus against NRC, CAB becomes louder
"Flawed, Divisive": Leading English Daily on Amit Shah's NRC
Alka Lamba dons Hijab, dares Modi to identify who is protesting against CAA
Subhas Chandra Bose's kin and WB BJP's senior leader questions CAA
"More brutal than Jamia": Fact finding report on police action against AMU students
Protests against CAA, NRC spread to other cities of UP, Death toll 15
Chandra Shekhar Azad leads thousands in anti-CAA protest at Delhi's Jama Masjid, detained
"Who is misleading": Questions galore after Modi's Ramlila Maidan rally
Modi accuses Opp of misleading Muslims on CAA, but fails to address NRC concerns
Javadekar reassures on NRC, says no Indian to be deprived of citizenship
CCTV clips show police storming into Mangaluru hospital, firing tear-gas shells
Kerala erupts as Mangalore police detains media personnel
Ample proof to confirm police deliberately injured students: Jamia Alumni
"He came like an angel": UP cop rescued by Haji Qadir during violent protest over CAA
Amid anti-CAA protest in UP, Hindus form human chain to escort Muslim 'baraat'
Jharkhand 2019 Polls: Muslims win 04 seats, lose 01 due to infighting
Lesson for Muslims from anti-CAA protests
Anti-CAA stir more important than 'Dabangg 3' collection: Sonakshi Sinha
Malegaon joins anti-Citizenship Act stir; all schools, colleges shut
Lawyers unearth chilling account of police brutality in AMU
NPR 2019 vs NPR 2010: Key difference that rings alarm bells
"CAA, NPR, NRC all interlinked": Owaisi asks KCR to stay NPR work
NPR gets cabinet nod, to be completed before 2021 Census