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1.
The development and maintenance of the Sertoli cell junctional complex were investigated in prepubertal and adult guinea pigs. To correlate the structure of the blood-testis barrier with its permeability, the polyene antibiotic filipin (a cholesterol-binding agent of low molecular weight: 570.70) was added to the fixative as a tracer visible in freeze-fracture replicas. Discontinuous zonules, intermediate junctions (i.e., adhering fasciae) and gap junctions all proved permeable to filipin in the two age groups. Only the continuous occluding zonules characteristic of the adult guinea pig's testis were impermeable to the tracer. In pubertal animals, the establishment of the blood-testis barrier coincided with the completion of the junctional strands in occluding zonules. The formation of occluding zonules was similar in the newborn and the adult. In the adult, the Sertoli cell junctional complexes contained three types of cell junctions: occluding, adhering, and gap junctions. The sequence of occluding and adhering junctions from the base to the apex of the epithelium was the reverse of that demonstrated in most epithelia. The impermeable continuous occluding zonules at the base showed parallel patterns of uninterrupted junctional strands, whereas the permeable discontinuous zonules found higher in the epithelium showed a meandering pattern of broken strands. Our observations indicate that (1) Sertoli cell junctional complexes form near the young germinal cells at the base of the seminiferous epithelium and break down near the older germinal cells toward the apex; (2) the various patterns and orientations of the junctional strands reflect, respectively, the different stages of disintegration of the occluding zonules and the conformation of the mature Sertoli cell to the irregular contours of the germinal cells; (3) there is no relationship between permeability and junctional strand orientation; and (4) the cellular contacts between Sertoli cells and germinal cells situated below the blood-testis barrier may represent the early stages of formation of junctional elements which ultimately become incorporated into the Sertoli cell junctional complex.  相似文献   

2.
Special occluding junctions between Sertoli cells near the base of the seminiferous epithelium are the structural basis of the blood-testis permeability barrier. In micrographs of thin sections, multiple punctate pentalaminar contacts between apposed membranes are observed in the junctional regions.In freeze-fractured mature testis, the junctional membranes exhibit up to 40 parallel circumferentially oriented rows of intramembrane particles preferentially associated with the B-fracture face, but with complementary shallow grooves on the A-face. Short rows of particles may remain with the A-face resulting in discontinuities in the B-face particle rows. In addition, elongate aggregations of particles of uniform size (~70 A) arranged in one or more closely packed rows are occasionally found adjacent to the linear depressions on the A-face of the Sertoli junction. These are interpreted as atypical gap junctions.In immature testis, occluding junctions are absent but typical gap junctions are common. These gradually disappear. In the second postnatal week, linear arrays of particles appear on the B-face. Initially meandering and highly variable in direction, these gradually adopt a consistent orientation parallel to the cell base. The establishment of the blood-testis barrier appears to be correlated with this reorganization of the intramembrane particle rows. Sertoli junctions were shown to be resistant to hypertonic solutions that rapidly dissociate junctions of other epithelia.Sertoli junctions thus differ from other occluding junctions in their (1) basal location, (2) large number of parallel particle rows, (3) absence of anastomosis between rows, (4) preferential association of the particles with the B-face, (5) intercalation of atypical gap junctions, (6) unusual resistance to dissociation by hypertonic solutions.  相似文献   

3.
The modulation of Sertoli cell junctions was studied in the non-seasonal rooster (Gallus domesticus) and in the seasonally breeding mallard duck (Anas platyrynchos anatidae) using thin sectioning, a junction permeability tracer, and freeze-fracture replication. During the active spermatogenic phase, the junctions of the duck appeared similar to those of the rooster, thereby establishing the duck as an avian model of seasonal modulation of Sertoli cell junctions. As with mammalian seasonal breeders, during the active phase, occluding, gap, and adhering junctions formed a junctional complex all along the long axis of the Sertoli cell. Unlike in mammals, however, no 7-nm filaments were associated with the occluding junctions. An occluding zonule encircled the Sertoli cell apico-lateral membrane domain situated above the young germ cells, and constituted a barrier to the entry of lanthanum in the basal third of the seminiferous epithelium. Toward the basal side, forming focal junctions were located on the lateral Sertoli cell membrane domain facing the young germ cells. Toward the apical side, dismantling focal junctions were located on the apical Sertoli cell membrane domain facing the older germ cells. During the duck's testicular regression, 7-nm filaments were associated with an occluding junction. In freeze-fracture replicas, each junction was formed by a continuous junctional strand that encircled the apex of the cell. The strands composed a delicate narrow meshwork: an occluding zonule. The blood-testis barrier was localized near the apex of the epithelium. The seasonal reduction in the number of the strands and the changes in their orientation did not coincide with a change in the permeability of the occluding zonule to lanthanum. In addition, the cyclic disappearance of junction-associated filaments was not correlated with a change in the permeability of the junctions but with a change in the affinity of junctional particles for one or the other fracture face. It is proposed that the Sertoli cell plasma membrane domains situated apical and basal with respect to the occluding zonule be considered apical and lateral, respectively. The remaining domain facing the basement membrane would therefore be called basal. In the duck, the occluding zonule is not seasonally shifted from the base to the apex of the Sertoli cell. Instead, it remains stationed above the younger germ cells throughout the year.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
In different epithelia, cell membranes contacting one another form intercellular junctional complexes including tight, adherens and gap junctions, which could mutually influence the expression of each other. We have here investigated the role of Cx43 in the control of adherens and tight junction proteins (N-cadherin, β-catenin, occludin and ZO-1) by using conditional Sertoli cell knockout Cx43 (SCCx43KO−/−) transgenic mice and specific anti-Cx43 siRNA. Gap junction coupling and Cx43 levels were reduced in SCCx43KO−/− as compared to Wild-type testes. Ultrastructural analysis revealed disappearance of gap junctions, the presence of tight and adherens junctions and persistent integrity of the blood-testis barrier in SCCx43KO−/− testis. Occludin, N-cadherin and β-catenin levels were enhanced in SCCx43KO−/− mice as compared to Wild-type animals whereas ZO-1 levels were reduced. Cx43 siRNA blocked gap junction functionality in Sertoli cells and altered tight and adherens protein levels. The Cx43 control of tight and adherens junctions appeared channel-dependent since gap junction blockers (glycyrrhetinic acid and oleamide) led to similar results. These data suggest that the control of spermatogenesis by Cx43 may be mediated through Sertoli cell Cx43 channels, which are required, not only in cell/cell communication between Sertoli and germ cells, but also in the regulation of other junctional proteins essential for the blood-testis barrier.  相似文献   

5.
Structures termed tubulobulbar complexes are known to be formed by adjoining Sertoli cells at the level of the blood-testis barrier (Russell and Clermont, '76). Here, long (2-4 micrometer) tubular evaginations of one Sertoli cell, which end in bulbous dilations, are seen in corresponding invaginations of a neighboring Sertoli cell. In most regions of the tubular and bulbous portions of the complex, the Sertoli plasma membranes were found to be separated by a 4-5-nm intercellular space, but in some areas the membranes converged to form tight and gap junctions. The numbers, distribution and properties of tubulobulbar complexes were studied in relation to the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. From the data obtained it was concluded that tubulobulbar complexes develop and undergo regressive changes during the spermatogenic cycle. Most complexes arise during the early stages of the cycle (Stages II-V) and develop large bulbous endings. Developing tubulobulbar complexes consist of short evaginations of one Sertoli cell which face a bristle-coated pit of the opposing Sertoli cell. At midcycle (Stages VI-VII) most show regressive changes and are eventually resorbed as a consequence of the action of nearby Sertoli lysosomes. Once resorbed, the probability of seeing a tubulobulbar complex in thin sections decreases from 4- to 8-fold. The few tubulobulbar complexes which remain past this period (Stages VII-XIV-I) usually lack bulbous endings and are fequently seen above type A spermatogonia. The data suggest that small fragments of cytoplasm and plasma membrane (including junctional surfaces) are lost from one Sertoli cell as a result of the degradative processes occurring in a neighboring Sertoli cell. Tubulobulbar resorption is discussed in relation to the impending breakdown of the blood-testis barrier above spermatocytes as these cells move upward. The possible significance of the cyclic resorption of tight and gap junctional sites between Sertoli cells is also discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Basally located tight junctions between Sertoli cells in the postpubertal testis are the largest and most complex junctional complexes known. They form at puberty and are thought to be the major structural component of the "blood-testis" barrier. We have now examined the development of these structures in the immature mouse testis in conjunction with immunolocalization of the tight-junction-associated protein ZO-1 (zonula occludens 1). In testes from 5-day-old mice, tight junctional complexes are absent and ZO-1 is distributed generally over the apicolateral, but not basal, Sertoli cell membrane. As cytoskeletal and reticular elements characteristic of the mature junction are recruited to the developing junctions, between 7 and 14 days, ZO-1 becomes progressively restricted to tight junctional regions. Immunogold labeling of ZO-1 on Sertoli cell plasma membrane preparations revealed specific localization to the cytoplasmic surface of tight junctional regions. In the mature animal, ZO-1 is similarly associated with tight junctional complexes in the basal aspects of the epithelium. In addition, it is also localized to Sertoli cell ectoplasmic specializations adjacent to early elongating, but not late, spermatids just prior to sperm release. Although these structures are not tight junctions, they do have a similar cytoskeletal arrangement, suggesting that ZO-1 interacts with the submembrane cytoskeleton. These results show that, in the immature mouse testis, ZO-1 is present on the Sertoli cell plasma membrane in the absence of recognizable tight junctions. In the presence of tight junctions, however, ZO-1 is found only at the sites of junctional specializations associated with tight junctions and with elongating spermatids.  相似文献   

7.
The correlations between the germ cell population and the blood-testis barrier were studied during puberty and throughout the reproductive cycle in a seasonal breeder, the mink. A classification of 12 stages, corresponding to the cellular associations appearing during the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium, was proposed and used to identify the stages of the cycle in pubertal mink. In adult mink, the reproductive cycle was divided into two spermatogenic phases--an active phase lasting 9 months, and an inactive phase lasting 3 months. The active spermatogenic phase was broken down into three distinct periods: the first spermatogenic wave, the peak of spermatogenic activity, and the last spermatogenic wave. Degenerating germ cells were found in comparable and relatively low proportions during puberty and during the first and last spermatogenic waves of the adult reproductive cycle. The permeability of the blood-testis barrier to intravascularly infused electron-opaque tracers (i.e., horseradish peroxidase and lanthanum) was tested at the time of the first spermatogenic wave at puberty and throughout the reproductive cycle of the adult. The relationship between epithelial permeability and germ cell populations prevailing during puberty and during the first and last spermatogenic waves of the adult active phase was the same. During puberty, the establishment of the blood-testis barrier did not coincide with the appearance of a particular step of meiosis but was correlated with the development of a tubular lumen. In adult mink, the barrier cyclically decayed during the last wave of the active spermatogenic phase and reformed during the first wave of the next active phase. The decay and the reformation of the barrier were not coincident with the appearance or disappearance of a particular generation of the germ cell population from the seminiferous epithelium but were correlated with cyclic cytological changes in Sertoli cells and the rhythmic development and occlusion of the lumen. During the peak months of the active spermatogenic phase, however, a blood-testis barrier secluded spermatogonia and young spermatocytes from older generations of germ cells. It is concluded that during puberty and also during the first and last spermatogenic wave of the adult mink reproductive cycle, the development of germ cells is possible in the absence of a competent, impermeable blood-testis barrier, and the transient presence of a permeable epithelial barrier does not initiate an autoimmune response of sufficient magnitude to cause destruction of the seminiferous epithelium.  相似文献   

8.
Summary In seven hypo- or aspermic patients, electron microscopic investigations of the intercellular connections of the seminiferous tubule were performed. The analysis of cell junctions of Sertoli cells and germ cells revealed irregularities of the Sertoli-cell junctions, hypoplasias of occluding junctions, hypo- and hyperplasias of the Sertoli-spermatid cell junctions and abnormal formation of Sertoli cell junctions with early spermatids, spermatocytes, and spermatogonia. Gap junction-like cell membrane specializations were very rare. Intercellular cytoplasmic bridges of germ cells were always present together with these cells. One hypoplastic bridge connecting two spermatogonia was found.The results allow a preliminary classification of impaired spermatogenesia. The changes of intercellular connections might disturb the blood-testis barrier as well as the intercellular communication in the seminiferous tubule. Evidence is available to support the suggestion that genetic causes play a considerable role in the etiology of the germ cell aplasia and the spermatogenic maturation arrest.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Thin sections of normal testes from the cyprinodont Aphanius dispar were studied by electron microscopy after intravascular injection of live specimens with horseradish peroxidase. The intercellular space in the spermatogenic cysts is marked differently by the tracer according to the degree of differentiation of the germ cells. Spermatogonia and gonocytes undergoing meiosis are surrounded by a dark band of the marker. This band gradually disappears during spermiogenesis. In cysts containing ripe spermatozoa, the marker penetrates a short distance between the bases of adjoining Sertoli cells bordering the cysts, but is arrested by tight junctional complexes near the lumina of the cysts. The tight junctions between the Sertoli cells provide a permeability barrier between the vascular spaces of the stroma and the lumina of ripe cysts.Abbreviations BM basement membrane - BTB blood-testis barrier - HRP horseradish peroxidase This research was supported by a grant from the National Council for Research and Development, Israel, and the GKSS Geesthacht-Tesperhude, Federal Republic of Germany  相似文献   

10.
Intercellular junction formation in preimplantation mouse embryos was investigated with thin-section and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. At the four-cell stage, regions of close membrane apposition with focal points of membrane contact and occasional underlying cytoplasmic densities were observed between blastomeres of thin-sectioned embryos. Corresponding intramembrane specializations were not, however, observed in freeze-fractured embryos. At the 8- to 16-cell stage, small gap and macula occludens junctions and complexes of these junctions were observed at all levels between blastomeres of freeze-fractured embryos. As development progressed from the early to mid 8- to 16-cell stage, the size of the occludens/gap junction complexes increased, forming fascia occludens/gap junction complexes. At the morula stage, gap junctions and occludens/gap junction complexes were observed on both presumptive trophoblast and inner cell-mass cells. Zonula occludens junctions were first observed at the morula stage on presumptive trophoblast cells of freeze-fractured embryos. The number of embryos possessing zonula occludens junctions increased at the mid compared to the early morula stage. At the blastocyst stage, junctional complexes consisting of zonula occludens, macula adherens, and gap junctions were observed between trophoblast cells of freeze-fractured and thin-sectioned embryos. Isolated gap and occludens junctions, adherens junctions, and occludens/gap junction complexes were observed on trophoblast and inner cell-mass cells.  相似文献   

11.
The ectoplasmic specialization (ES) is a testis-specific, actin-based hybrid anchoring and tight junction. It is confined to the interface between Sertoli cells at the blood-testis barrier, known as the basal ES, as well as between Sertoli cells and developing spermatids designated the apical ES. The ES shares features of adherens junctions, tight junctions and focal contacts. By adopting the best features of each junction type, this hybrid nature of ES facilitates the extensive junction-restructuring events in the seminiferous epithelium during spermatogenesis. For instance, the alpha6beta1-integrin-laminin 333 complex, which is usually limited to the cell-matrix interface in other epithelia to facilitate cell movement, is a putative apical ES constituent. Furthermore, JAM-C and CAR, two tight junction integral membrane proteins, are also components of apical ES involving in spermatid orientation. We discuss herein the mechanisms that maintain the cross-talk between ES and blood-testis barrier to facilitate cell movement and orientation in the seminiferous epithelium.  相似文献   

12.
Tracer and freeze-fracture electron microscopy of the ovaries of neonatal rat and adult mouse, rat, rabbit, and primate have revealed the presence of gap junctions between follicle cells and oocytes. The junctional connections are found at the ends of follicle cell projections which traverse the zona pellucida and terminate upon microvilli and evenly contoured nonmicrovillar regions of the oolemma. Gap junctions are often seen associated with a macula adherens type of junction. The gap junctions occasionally consist of minute ovoid plaques, but nore frequently appear as rectilinear single- or multiple- row aggregates of particles on the P-face or pits on the E-face. The functional significance of follicle cell-oocyte gap junctions is discussed with respect to the regulation of meiosis and luteinization.  相似文献   

13.
Ectoplasmic specializations (ES) containing packed actin microfilaments are associated with the numerous parallel rows of occluding junctions which form the Sertoli cell (blood-testis) barrier. To determine if ES regulate the structure of the occluding junctions and/or barrier permeability, we experimentally disrupted ES microfilaments in vivo with intratesticularly injected cytochalasin D (CD). Electron microscopic observations of seminiferous tubules from CD-treated (150-500 microM CD; 0.5-12 hr) animals indicated that ES was absent from regions where the Sertoli cell barrier is located. Seminiferous epithelial sheets from uninjected or vehicle-injected animals (1 DMSO: 1 saline) stained with NBD-phallacidin demonstrated the presence of patterned ES actin surrounding the basolateral regions of adjacent Sertoli cells. After exposure to CD, epithelial sheets exhibited increasingly patchy fluorescence indicating progressive F-actin disruption. Freeze-fracture replicas of CD-injected testes revealed numerous focal alterations in the region of occluding junctions which included disorganization of the parallel arrangement of junctional rows, the presence of free-ending rows, clustering of intramembranous particles (IMPs) between rows, reduction in the number of rows, and loss of IMPs on both the P-face and E-face. Tracer experiments, following CD exposure, were conducted to test the integrity of occluding junctions: lanthanum hydroxide, dextrose, or filipin was added, in separate experiments, to the fixative during perfusion-fixation. In another study, serum containing an antibody against adluminal germ cells was injected intratesticularly, and frozen sections were processed for immunofluorescence study. A final study consisted of simultaneous intratesticular infusions of CD and radiolabelled inulin with subsequent intraluminal and peritubular fluid sampling. In animals which were injected with CD, lanthanum was found to enter the adluminal compartment; fixative made hypertonic by addition of dextrose caused germ cells within the adluminal compartment to shrink and produce exaggerated intercellular spaces; filipin-cholesterol perturbations were present between some Sertoli cell junctional rows and on spermatid plasma membranes; and IgG was detected within the adluminal compartment of many seminiferous tubules. None of these adluminal manifestations was noted in control animals or those which received vehicle. Quantitatively, in the in vivo micropuncture experiments, significantly more radiolabelled inulin entered the lumen of seminiferous tubules from CD-treated animals than from those exposed to vehicle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The relationship between the intactness of sustentacular (Sertoli) cell tight junctions and the status of spermatogenesis was examined in rats fed a vitamin-A-deficient diet after weaning (VAD rats). Both serum and testicular retinol concentrations of the VAD rats declined to a nadir by 80 days of age. At this time, it was observed that Sertoli cell tight junctions of the VAD animals were intact and complete spermatogenesis was maintained. Leakage in Sertoli cell tight junctions, as demonstrated by the presence of lanthanum in the adluminal compartment of the seminiferous epithelium, was first observed in 90-day-old VAD rats. Severe regression of spermatogenic cells was noted in 100-day or older VAD animals. These results suggest that severe germ cell loss observed during chronic vitamin A deficiency may result from abnormal intratubular environment due to the disruption of the blood-testis barrier.  相似文献   

15.
The tight junctions of the choroid plexus epithelium of rats were studied by freeze-fracture. In glutaraldehyde-fixed material, the junctions exhibited rows of aligned particles and short bars on P-faces, the E-faces showing grooves bearing relatively many particles. A particulate nature of the junctional strands could be established by using unfixed material. The mean values of junctional strands from the lateral, third, and fourth ventricles of Lewis rats were 7.5 +/- 2.6, 7.4 +/- 2.2, and 7.5 +/- 2.4; and of Sprague-Dawley rats 7.7 +/- 3.4, 7.4 +/- 2.3, and 7.3 +/- 1.6. Examination of complementary replicas (of fixed tissue) showed that discomtinuities are present in the junctional strands: 42.2 +/- 4.6% of the length of measured P-face ridges were discontinuities, and the total amount of complementary particles in E-face grooves constituted 17.8 +/- 4.4% of the total length of the grooves, thus approximately 25% of the junctional strands can be considered to be discontinuous. The average width of the discontinuities, when corrected for complementary particles in E-face grooves, was 7.7 +/- 4.5 nm. In control experiments with a "tighter" tight junction (small intestine), complementary replicas revealed that the junctional fibrils are rather continuous and that the very few particles in E-face grooves mostly filled out discontinuities in the P-face ridges. Approximately 5% of the strands were found to be discontinuous. These data support the notion that the presence of pores in the junctional strands of the choroid plexus epithelium may explain the high transepithelial conductance in a "leaky" epithelium having a high number of junctional strands. However, loss of junctional material during fracturing is also considered as an alternative explanation of the present results.  相似文献   

16.
Dallai R  Lupetti P  Lane NJ 《Tissue & cell》1996,28(5):603-612
Cultures of the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis were examined with regard to their interepithelial junctions after infiltration with the extracellular tracer lanthanum, freeze-fracturing or quick-freeze deepetching. The lateral borders between ciliated cells have an unusual apical adhering junction. This apical part of their intercellular cleft looks desmosome-like, but it is characterized by unusual intramembranous E-face clusters of particles. Deep-etching reveals that these are packed together in short rows which lie parallel to one another in orderly arrays. The true membrane surface in these areas features filaments in the form of short ribbons; these are produced by projections, possibly part of the glycocalyx, emerging from the membranes, between which the electron-dense tracer lanthanum permeates. These projections appear to overlap with each other in the centre of the intercellular cleft; this would provide a particularly flexible adaptation to maintain cell-cell contact and coordination as a consequence. The filamentous ribbons may be held in position by the intramembranous particle arrays since both have a similar size and distribution. These contacts are quite different from desmosomes and appear to represent a distinct new category of adhesive cell-cell junction. Beneath these novel structures, conventional pleated septate junctions are found, exhibiting the undulating intercellular ribbons typical of this junctional type, as well as the usual parallel alignments of intramembranous rows of EF grooves and PF particles. Below these are found gap junctions as close-packed plaques of intramembranous particles on either the P-face or E-face. After freeze-fracturing, the complementary fracture face to the particles shows pits, usually on the P-face, arrayed with a very precise hexagonal pattern.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The pattern of compartmentation of the seminiferous epithelium was investigated, using a lanthanum tracer technique, in human testicular biopsies of adult infertile men (age 27 to 44 years), where dislocation of spermatogonia from the basal lamina occurred. Spermatogonia type A and B were found in a two-or three-layered arrangement, in aberrant locations throughout the seminiferous epithelium, and in intratubular positions associated with fragments of Sertoli cell cytoplasm. Tracer impregnation was found around spermatogonia in a multilayered arrangement, indicating the extension of the basal compartment in a luminal direction. Single spermatogonia within the second or third layer of the seminiferous epithelium were regularly found to be surrounded by tracer. The junctional complex between the lateral membranes of adjacent Sertoli cells was devoid of tight junctions. Tracer penetration around spermatogonia in a more luminal position was prevented by intact Sertoli cell junctional complexes; tracer was also absent from intraluminal located spermatogonia associated with cytoplasmic fragments of Sertoli cells. The luminal extension of the basal compartment associated with the dislocation of spermatogonia clearly differs from the pattern of compartmentation during the movement of primary spermatocytes within undisturbed epithelium. There is a strong incidence of elevated serum levels of folliclestimulating hormone (>7 U/l), indicating a suppression of Sertoli cell function; this may be the cause for the dislocation of spermatogonia and the changes of compartmentation.  相似文献   

18.
Near the base of mammalian seminiferous epithelium, Sertoli cells are joined by tight junctions, which constitute the blood-testis barrier. Differentiating germ cells are completely enveloped by Sertoli cells and must traverse the tight junctions during spermatogenic cycle. Following the specific ligand activation of L-selectin, the up-regulated Rho family small G-proteins have been implicated as important modulators of tight junctional dynamics. Although the activation of L-selectin transmits subsequent intracellular signals in a Ca(+2)-dependent fashion in various cell types, little is understood regarding the signaling pathways utilized by L-selectin in Sertoli cells. Therefore, we have examined the possible resultant calcium influx triggered by specific ligand-activation of cell surface L-selectin receptors or by cross-linking of L-selectin with anti-L-selectin. Spectrofluorimetric studies demonstrate increase of intracellular Ca(+2) levels immediately after the treatment of the L-selectin ligands, fucoidan and sialyl Lewis-a, or after treatment with anti-L-selectin antibody. We then determined the mechanism of Ca(+2) influx by investigating L- and T-type voltage-operated Ca(+2) channels, which have been suggested to present in the membranes of Sertoli cells. Data demonstrate that Sertoli cells treated with L-type voltage-operated Ca(+2) channel antagonists, nifedipine, diltiazem, or verapamil, lead to dose-dependent blockage of L-selectin-induced Ca(+2) influx. Cells treated with mibedradil, a T-type voltage-operated Ca(+2) channel antagonist, results in little or no blocking effect. Therefore, we conclude that activation of Sertoli cell L-selectin induces Ca(+2) influx, which is at least partially regulated by L-type voltage-operated Ca(+2) channels.  相似文献   

19.
Sertoli cell tight junctions (TJs) form at puberty as a major component of the blood-testis barrier (BTB), which is essential for spermatogenesis. This study characterized the hormonal induction of functional Sertoli cell TJ formation in vivo using the gonadotropin-deficient hypogonadal (hpg) mouse that displays prepubertal spermatogenic arrest. Androgen actions were determined in hpg mice treated for 2 or 10 days with dihydrotestosterone (DHT). Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) actions were studied in hpg mice expressing transgenic human FSH (hpg+tgFSH) with or without DHT treatment. TJ formation was examined by mRNA expression and immunolocalization of TJ proteins claudin-3 and claudin-11, and barrier functionality was examined by biotin tracer permeability. Immunolocalization of claudin-3 and claudin-11 was extensive at wild-type (wt) Sertoli cell TJs, which functionally excluded permeability tracer. In contrast, seminiferous tubules of hpg testes lacked claudin-3, but claudin-11 protein was present in adluminal regions of Sertoli cells. Biotin tracer permeated throughout these tubules, demonstrating dysfunctional TJs. In hpg+tgFSH testes, claudin-3 was generally absent, but claudin-11 had redistributed basally toward the TJs, where function was variable. In hpg testes, DHT treatment stimulated the redistribution of claudin-11 protein toward the basal region of Sertoli cells by Day 2, increased Cldn3 and Cldn11 mRNA expression, then induced the formation of functional TJs containing both proteins by Day 10. In hpg+tgFSH testes, TJ protein redistribution was accelerated and functional TJs formed by Day 2 of DHT treatment. We conclude that androgen stimulates initial Sertoli cell TJ formation and function in mice, whereas FSH activity is insufficient alone, but augments androgen-induced TJ function.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The time of establishment of the blood-testis barrier in the rabbit was studied by electron microscopy using lanthanum nitrate. This electron-dense tracer was present in the intercellular spaces in all regions of the seminiferous cords in 7 to 9-week-old animals. In 10 and 11-week-old rabbits, the penetration of lanthanum nitrate was restricted to the basal region of the seminiferous cords. Closer examination revealed the presence of numerous tight junctions between adjacent Sertoli cells. The morphological appearance of these junctions was similar to those described previously in other mammals. Entry of the tracer substance was restricted at these junctions. Pachytene germ cells, which reside beyond the junctions, were never surrounded by the tracer. Based on our observations it was concluded that the blood-testis barrier in the rabbit is formed between the 9th and 10th postnatal week, and that it is functionally effective by the 10th week.  相似文献   

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