The Daily Telegraph

Breakthrou­gh for male contracept­ive pill

- By Laura Donnelly HEALTH EDITOR

SCIENTISTS have made a breakthrou­gh that could be key to developing a male contracept­ive pill.

The discovery uses a peptide which changes the way human cells work, “switching off ” sperm’s ability to swim, to render men temporaril­y infertile.

Scientists hailed the results as “startling – and almost instant”. It raises the prospect of a fast-acting pill or a nasal spray that a man could take hours or even minutes before sex.

Women are typically advised to stop taking the Pill weeks or even months before trying to conceive.

But researcher­s believe the effects of a male pill would happen almost in- stantly, with effects wearing off within a matter of days.

Family planning experts said a reversible male contracept­ive could help benefit couples where the woman does not want to take the Pill.

Lead researcher Professor John Howl, of Wolverhamp­ton University, said the new compound, made in the lab, had shown immediate results.

“The results are startling – and almost instant. When you take healthy sperm and add our compound, within a few minutes the sperm basically cannot move,” he said.

Working with scientists from Portugal, the team made a compound called a cell-penetratin­g peptide.

“This is a totally unique approach,” said Prof Howl. “Nobody else has ever done this before,” he told the Mail on Sunday.

Peptides are short chains of amino acids which influence how human cells work. They occur naturally but can also be created synthetica­lly.

The breakthoug­h came after scientists in Wolverhamp­ton demonstrat­ed that particular peptides could penetrate sperm cells. Then fertility experts at Aveiro University in Portugal, who had identified the protein that drives sperm to swim, created a bespoke compound which turned the protein off.

The approach was tested in the lab on bovine and human sperm, with live animal tests due to start within three years.

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