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1.
To study self-renewal and differentiation of spermatogonial stem cells, we have transplanted undifferentiated testicular germ cells of the GFP transgenic mice into seminiferous tubules of mutant mice with male sterility, such as those dysfunctioned at Steel (Sl) locus encoding the c-kit ligand or Dominant white spotting (W) locus encoding the receptor c-kit. In the seminiferous tubules of Sl/Sl(d) or Sl(17H)/Sl(17H) mice, transplanted donor germ cells proliferated and formed colonies of undifferentiated c-kit (-) spermatogonia, but were unable to differentiate further. However, these undifferentiated but proliferating spermatogonia, retransplanted into Sl (+) seminiferous tubules of W mutant, resumed differentiation, indicating that the transplanted donor germ cells contained spermatogonial stem cells and that stimulation of c-kit receptor by its ligand was necessary for maintenance of differentiated type A spermatogonia but not for proliferation of undifferentiated type A spermatogonia. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that their transplantation efficiency in the seminiferous tubules of Sl(17H)/Sl(17H) mice depended upon the stem cell niche on the basement membrane of the recipient seminiferous tubules and was increased by elimination of the endogenous spermatogonia of mutant mice from the niche by treating them with busulfan.  相似文献   

2.
Apoptosis plays an important role in controlling germ cell numbers and restricting abnormal cell proliferation during spermatogenesis. The tumor suppressor protein, p53, is highly expressed in the testis, and is known to be involved in apoptosis, which suggests that it is one of the major causes of germ cell loss in the testis. Mice that are c-kit/SCF mutant (Sl/Sld) and cryptorchid show similar testicular phenotypes; they carry undifferentiated spermatogonia and Sertoli cells in their seminiferous tubules. To investigate the role of p53-dependent apoptosis in infertile testes, we transplanted p53-deficient spermatogonia that were labeled with enhanced green fluorescence protein into cryptorchid and Sl/Sld testes. In cryptorchid testes, transplanted p53-deficient spermatogonia differentiated into spermatocytes, but not into haploid spermatids. In contrast, no differentiated germ cells were observed in Sl/Sld mutant testes. These results indicate that the mechanism of germ cell loss in the c-kit/SCF mutant is not dependent on p53, whereas the apoptotic mechanism in the cryptorchid testis is quite different (i.e., although the early stage of differentiation of spermatogonia and the meiotic prophase is dependent on p53-mediated apoptosis, the later stage of spermatids is not).  相似文献   

3.
The effect of white-spotting (W) mutations on differentiation of testicular germ cells was investigated by using experimental cryptorchidism and its surgical reversal. All mutant mice used in this study (Wv/+, Wsh/+, Wf/+ and Wf/Wf) showed normal fertility and well-ordered spermatogenesis, as in congenic +/+ mice. In the cryptorchid testis, which contains only type A spermatogonia as germ cells, the number and the proliferative activity of type A spermatogonia in mutant mice were comparable to +/+ mice. On the other hand, surgical reversal of the cryptorchid testis in mutants resulted in impaired regenerative differentiation of germ cells. Although complete recovery of spermatogenesis was observed in +/+ mice, testicular weight in Wsh/+, Wf/+ and Wf/Wf mice recovered to approximately 60-70% of intact levels, and some portions of seminiferous epithelium showed incomplete spermatogenesis. In Wv/+ mice, however, ability to recover the weight was completely lost, and only type A spermatogonia existed as germ cells in seminiferous tubules 3 mo after surgical reversal. These results suggest that W mutation affects the differentiation through type A spermatogonia to type B spermatogonia, indicating the functional significance of W (c-kit) in early spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
C57BL/6(B6)-jsd/jsd mice are sterile due to the defective spermatogenesis in the testes. To know the cause of the deficient spermatogenesis in B6-jsd/jsd mice, we examined whether the problem is within or outside the seminiferous tubules by transplanting tubules from cryptorchid testes of B6- +/+ mice into B6-jsd/jsd testes or tubules from B6-jsd/jsd mice into testes of (WB x C57BL/6)F1-W/Wv (hereafter, WBB6F1-W/Wv) mice. Type A spermatogonia differentiated into spermatids in seminiferous tubules from cryptorchid testes transplanted into B6-jsd/jsd testes. In contrast, in B6-jsd/jsd tubules transplanted into WBB6F1-W/Wv testes, type A spermatogonia were stimulated to mitotic proliferation, but didn't proceed to any differentiated germ cells. The present results suggest that the cause of the deficient spermatogenesis in B6-jsd/jsd mice is a defect of intratubular environment to support germ cell differentiation.  相似文献   

5.
Spermatogenesis is a complex and productive process that originates from stem cell spermatogonia and ultimately results in formation of mature spermatozoa. The stem cell undergoes self-renewal throughout life, but study of its biological characteristics has been difficult because a very small number (2 to 3 in 10(4) cells) exist in the testis and they can only be identified by function. Although the development of the spermatogonial transplantation technique has provided an assay system for stem cells, efficient methods to enrich stem cells have not been available. Here, we examined two infertile mouse models, Steel/Steel(Dickie)(Sl/Sl(d)) and experimental cryptorchid, as a source of testis cell populations enriched in stem cells. The Sl/Sl(d) testis showed little enrichment, which raises questions about how adult stem cell number is determined and about the currently accepted belief that adult stem cells are independent of Sl factor. The cells recovered from cryptorchid testes were enriched for stem cells 25-fold (colonies) or 50-fold (area) compared to wild-type testes. The cryptorchid condition does not affect stem cell activity, but eliminates almost all differentiated cells, and about 1 in 200 cells is a stem cell. Thus, cryptorchid testes provide an important approach for purification and characterization of spermatogonial stem cells.  相似文献   

6.
Azoospermia or oligozoospermia due to disruption of spermatogenesis are common causes of human male infertility. We used the technique of spermatogonial transplantation in two infertile mouse strains, Steel (Sl) and dominant white spotting (W), to determine if stem cells from an infertile male were capable of generating spermatogenesis. Transplantation of germ cells from infertile Sl/Sld mutant male mice to infertile W/Wv or Wv/W54 mutant male mice restored fertility to the recipient mice. Thus, transplantation of spermatogonial stem cells from an infertile donor to a permissive testicular environment can restore fertility and result in progeny with the genetic makeup of the infertile donor male.  相似文献   

7.
The continuous production of mammalian sperm is maintained by the proliferation and differentiation of spermatogonial stem cells that originate from primordial germ cells (PGCs) in the early embryo. Although spermatogonial stem cells arise from PGCs, it is not clear whether fetal male germ cells function as spermatogonial stem cells able to produce functional sperm. In the present study, we examined the timing and mechanisms of the commitment of fetal germ cells to differentiate into spermatogonial stem cells by transplantation techniques. Transplantation of fetal germ cells into the seminiferous tubules of adult testis showed that donor germ cells, at 14.5 days postcoitum (dpc), were able to initiate spermatogenesis in the adult recipient seminiferous tubules, whereas no germ cell differentiation was observed in the transplantation of 12.5-dpc germ cells. These results indicate that the commitment of fetal germ cells to differentiate into spermatogonial stem cells initiates between embryonic days 12.5 and 14.5. Furthermore, the results suggest the importance of the interaction between germ cells and somatic cells in the determination of fetal germ cell differentiation into spermatogonial stem cells, as normal spermatogenesis was observed when a 12.5-dpc whole gonad was transplanted into adult recipient testis. In addition, sperm obtained from the 12.5- dpc male gonadal explant had the ability to develop normally if injected into the cytoplasm of oocytes, indicating that normal development of fetal germ cells in fetal gonadal explant occurred in the adult testicular environment.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The growth, differentiation, and death/survival of spermatogonia are precisely regulated for the proper production of spermatozoa. We have previously shown that Bcl-2 ectopically expressed in spermatogonia caused the inhibition of normal spermatogonial apoptosis and the subsequent failure of differentiation in transgenic mice. In addition, the growth of spermatogonial stem cells seemed to be temporally arrested in the transgenic mice. In the present study, we attempted to examine whether the abnormality of spermatogonia described above was caused by Bcl-2 misexpression in the spermatogonia or by an abnormal spermatogenic environment of the transgenic mice. We transplanted testicular cells of transgenic mice to seminiferous tubules of W/Wv mice in which transplanted normal testicular cells can undergo spermatogenesis. We found that the transplanted spermatogonia of the transgenic mice reproduced a series of abnormal changes including temporal growth arrest of spermatogonial stem cells and abnormal accumulation of spermatogonia in tubules, which were also observed in the testes of the transgenic mice. The results indicated that Bcl-2 inhibited apoptosis of spermatogonia and growth of spermatogonial stem cells in a cell-intrinsic manner. We also cultured testicular cells of transgenic mice and found that the spermatogonia of the transgenic mice were better able to survive than were those of wild-type mice but that their differentiation was not affected. The result suggested that failure of differentiation of the accumulated spermatogonia in the transgenic testes is not due to the abnormality of the bcl-2 misexpressing spermatogonia, but may be caused by extrinsic problems including improper interaction of spermatogonia with supporting cells.  相似文献   

10.
Mammalian male germ cells might be generally thought to have infinite proliferative potential based on their life-long production of huge numbers of sperm. However, there has been little substantial evidence that supports this assumption. In the present study, we performed serial transplantation of spermatogonial stem cells to investigate if they expand by self-renewing division following transplantation. The transgenic mouse carrying the Green fluorescent protein gene was used as the donor cell source that facilitated identification and recollection of colonized donor germ cells in the recipient testes. The established colonies of germ cells in the recipient testes were collected and transplanted to new recipients. This serial transplantation of spermatogonial stem cells repopulated the recipient testes, which were successfully performed sequentially up to four times from one recipient to the next. The incubation periods between two sequential transplantations ranged from 55 to 373 days. During these passages, the spermatogonial stem cells showed constant activity to form spermatogenic colonies in the recipient testis. They continued to increase in number for more than a year following transplantation. Colonization efficiency of spermatogonial stem cells was determined to be 4.25% by using Sl/Sl(d) mice as recipients that propagated only undifferentiated type A spermatogonia in their testes. Based on the colonization efficiency, one colony-forming activity was assessed to equate to about 20 spermatogonial stem cells. The spermatogonial stem cells were estimated to expand over 50-fold in 100 days in this experiment.  相似文献   

11.
Initiation of the first wave of spermatogenesis in the neonatal mouse testis is characterized by the differentiation of a transient population of germ cells called gonocytes found in the center of the seminiferous tubule. The fate of gonocytes depends upon these cells resuming mitosis and developing the capacity to migrate from the center of the seminiferous tubule to the basement membrane. This process begins approximately Day 3 postpartum in the mouse, and by Day 6 postpartum differentiated type A spermatogonia first appear. It is essential for continual spermatogenesis in adults that some gonocytes differentiate into spermatogonial stem cells, which give rise to all differentiating germ cells in the testis, during this neonatal period. The presence of spermatogonial stem cells in a population of cells can be assessed with the use of the spermatogonial stem cell transplantation technique. Using this assay, we found that germ cells from the testis of Day 0-3 mouse pups can colonize recipient testes but do not proliferate and establish donor-derived spermatogenesis. However, germ cells from testes of Day 4-5 postpartum mice colonize recipient testes and generate large areas of donor-derived spermatogenesis. Likewise, germ cells from Day 10, 12, and 28 postpartum animals and adult animals colonize and establish donor-derived spermatogenesis, but a dramatic reduction in the number of colonies and the extent of colonization occurs from germ cell donors Days 12-28 postpartum that continues in adult donors. These results suggest spermatogonial stem cells are not present or not capable of initiating donor-derived spermatogenesis until Days 3-4 postpartum. The analysis of germ cell development during this time frame of development and spermatogonial stem cell transplantation provides a unique system to investigate the establishment of the stem cell niche within the mouse testis.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Mutant mice of Sl/Sld genotype are deficient in melanocytes, erythrocytes, mast cells and germ cells. Deficiency of melanocytes, erythrocytes and mast cells is not attributable to an intrinsic defect in their precursor cells but to a defect in the tissue environment that is necessary for migration, proliferation and/or differentiation. We investigated the mechanism of germ cell deficiency in male Sl/Sld mice by producing aggregation chimaeras from Sl/Sld and +/+ embryos. Chimaeric mice with apparent white stripes were obtained. Two of four such chimaeras were fertile and the phenotypes of resulting progenies showed that some Sl/Sld germ cells had differentiated into functioning sperms in the testis of the chimaeras. In cross sections of the testes of chimaeras, both differentiated and nondifferentiated tubules were observed. However, the proportions of type A spermatogonia to Sertoli cells in both types of tubules were comparable to the values observed in differentiated tubules of normal +/+ mice. We reconstructed the whole length of four tubules from serial sections. Differentiated and nondifferentiated segments alternated in a single tubule. The shortest differentiated segment contained about 180 Sertoli cells and the shortest nondifferentiated segment about 150 Sertoli cells. These results suggest that Sertoli cells of either Sl/Sld or +/+ genotype make discrete patches and that differentiation of type A spermatogonia does not occur in patches of Sl/Sld Sertoli cells.  相似文献   

14.
Primate spermatogonial stem cells colonize mouse testes   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
In mice, transplantation of spermatogonial stem cells from a fertile male to the seminiferous tubules of an infertile recipient male results in progeny with donor-derived haplotype. Attempts to extend this approach by transplanting human testis cells to mice have led to conflicting claims that no donor germ cells persisted or that human spermatozoa were produced in the recipient. To examine this issue we used the baboon, a primate in which testis cell populations of several ages could be obtained for transplantation, and demonstrate that donor spermatogonial stem cells readily establish germ cell colonies in recipient mice, which exist for periods of at least 6 mo. However, differentiation of germ cells toward the lumen of the tubule and production of spermatozoa did not occur. The presence of baboon spermatogonial stem cells and undifferentiated spermatogonia in mouse seminiferous tubules for long periods after transplantation indicates that antigens, growth factors, and signaling molecules that are necessary for interaction of these cells and the testis environment have been preserved for 100 million years of evolutionary separation. Because germ cell differentiation and spermatogenesis did not occur, the molecules necessary for this process appear to have undergone greater divergence between baboon and mouse.  相似文献   

15.
The normal products of the murine Steel (Sl) and Dominant white spotting (W) genes are essential for the development of melanocyte precursors, germ cells, and hematopoietic cells. The Sl locus encodes stem cell factor (SCF), which is the ligand of c-kit, a receptor tyrosine kinase encoded by the W locus. One allele of the Sl mutation, Sl17H, exhibits minor hematopoietic defects, sterility only in males, and a complete absence of coat pigmentation. The Sl17H gene encodes SCF protein which exhibits an altered cytoplasmic domain due to a splicing defect. In this paper we analyzed the mechanism by which the pigmentation phenotype in Sl17H mutant mice occurs. We show that in embryos homozygous for Sl17H the number of melanocyte precursors is severely reduced on the lateral neural crest migration pathway by e11.5 and can no longer be detected by e13.5 when they would enter the epidermis in wildtype embryos. The reduced number of dispersing melanocyte precursors correlates with a reduction of SCF immunoreactivity in mutant embryos in all tissues examined. Regardless of the reduced amount, functional SCF is present at the cell surface of fibroblasts transfected with Sl17H mutant SCF cDNA. Since SCF immunoreactivity normally accumulates in basolateral compartments of SCF-expressing embryonic epithelial tissues, we analyzed the localization of wildtype and Sl17H mutant SCF protein in transfected epithelial (MDCK) cells in vitro. As expected, wildtype forms of SCF localize to and are secreted from the basolateral compartment. In contrast, mutant forms of SCF, which either lack a membrane anchor or exhibit the Sl17H altered cytoplasmic tail, localize to and are secreted from the apical compartment of the cultured epithelium. We suggest, therefore, that the loss of melanocyte precursors prior to epidermal invasion, and the loss of germ cells from mature testis, can be explained by the inability of Sl17H mutant SCF to be targeted to the basolateral compartment of polarized epithelial keratinocytes and Sertoli cells, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
In mice, the juvenile spermatogonial depletion (jsd) mutation results in a single wave of spermatogenesis followed by failure of type A spermatogonial stem cells to repopulate the testis, rendering male animals sterile. It is not clear whether the defect in jsd resides in a failure of the somatic component to support spermatogenesis or in a failure that is intrinsic to the mutant's germ cells. To determine if the jsd intratesticular environment is capable of supporting spermatogenesis, germ cell transplantation experiments were performed in which C57BL/6 ROSA germ cells were transplanted into jsd recipients. To determine if jsd spermatogonia are able to develop in a permissive seminiferous environment, jsd germ cells were transplanted into W/W(v) and busulfan-treated C57BL/6 animals. The data demonstrate that up to 7 mo after transplantation of normal germ cells, jsd seminiferous tubules are capable of supporting spermatogenesis. In contrast, when jsd germ cells were transplanted into busulfan-treated C57BL/6 testis, or into testis of W/W(v) mice, no jsd-derived spermatogenesis was observed. The data support the hypothesis that the jsd phenotype is due to a defect in the germ cells themselves, and not in the intratubular environment.  相似文献   

17.
Recent studies have demonstrated that GnRH-analogues can stimulate regeneration of spermatogenesis of rats when administered after testicular damages. Although the mechanism of this phenomenon has not been elucidated yet, stem cell factor (SCF) produced by Sertoli cells was proposed to mediate the effects of GnRH-analogues on spermatogonial proliferation and/or survival. In the present study, we quantitatively evaluated the proliferation of spermatogonia and addressed whether SCF mediates the effect of GnRH-analogue on spermatogonial proliferation, using a novel approach combining spermatogonial transplantation and laser confocal microscopic observation. In the first experiment, using wild-type mice as recipients for spermatogonial transplantation, the number of donor spermatogonia per 100 Sertoli cells in each spermatogenic colony was significantly higher in the experimental group of mice treated with leuprorelin, a GnRH-agonist, than that of the control group at 4 and 5 wk after transplantation. In the second experiment, Steel/Steeldickie (Sl/Sld) mutant mice, which lack expression of membrane bound form SCF, were used as recipients. As seen in the first experiment, the number of undifferentiated spermatogonia was significantly higher in leuprorelin-treated than in the control group. Since undifferentiated spermatogonia do not express the receptor of SCF, the present study clearly demonstrates that neither membrane-bound nor secreted forms of SCF are involved in the mechanism of GnRH-analogue's effect on spermatogonial proliferation and/or survival.  相似文献   

18.
Spermatogonia in the mouse testis arise from early postnatal gonocytes that are derived from primordial germ cells (PGCs) during embryonic development. The proliferation, self-renewal, and differentiation of spermatogonial stem cells provide the basis for the continuing integrity of spermatogenesis. We previously reported that Pin1-deficient embryos had a profoundly reduced number of PGCs and that Pin1 was critical to ensure appropriate proliferation of PGCs. The current investigation aimed to elucidate the function of Pin1 in postnatal germ cell development by analyzing spermatogenesis in adult Pin1-/- mice. Although Pin1 was ubiquitously expressed in the adult testis, we found it to be most highly expressed in spermatogonia and Sertoli cells. Correspondingly, we show here that Pin1 plays an essential role in maintaining spermatogonia in the adult testis. Germ cells in postnatal Pin1-/- testis were able to initiate and complete spermatogenesis, culminated by production of mature spermatozoa. However, there was a progressive and age-dependent degeneration of the spermatogenic cells in Pin1-/- testis that led to complete germ cell loss by 14 mo of age. This depletion of germ cells was not due to increased cell apoptosis. Rather, detailed analysis of the seminiferous tubules using a germ cell-specific marker revealed that depletion of spermatogonia was the first step in the degenerative process and led to disruption of spermatogenesis, which resulted in eventual tubule degeneration. These results reveal that the presence of Pin1 is required to regulate proliferation and/or cell fate of undifferentiated spermatogonia in the adult mouse testis.  相似文献   

19.
Mutations in either the dominant white-spotting (W) or Steel (Sl) loci of the mouse lead to coat color, primordial germ cell and hematopoietic defects. Consistent with the cell autonomous and microenvironmental nature of W and Sl mutations, respectively, it has recently been shown that W encodes the c-kit receptor tyrosine kinase while Sl encodes a ligand for this receptor. Previous in situ hybridization analysis has shown that both c-kit and steel are expressed in the embryo in anatomical sites known to be affected by W and Sl mutations and in various tissues in which no corresponding phenotype has been described. To investigate the possible involvement of the Kit transduction pathway in developmental processes, we compared the patterns of expression of c-kit and steel in wild-type embryos and in embryos homozygous for severe (lethal) and mild (viable) alleles at the W and Sl loci. In addition, we analyzed the patterns of expression of both genes in adult wild-type and mutant gonads and brain. Both c-kit and steel are contiguously expressed in a wide variety of anatomical locations in both the developing embryo and in the adult. In adult gonads, steel is expressed in the follicular cells of the ovary and in Sertoli cells of the testis, the layers that immediately surround the c-kit expressing germ cells. In adult brain, the complementary patterns are particularly striking in the olfactory bulb, cerebral cortex, hippocampus region and cerebellum. steel expression in brain is probably restricted to neurons in certain areas, while c-kit is expressed in neurons and in some glial cells. Severe mutations in the W or Sl loci result in dramatic reduction or absence of c-kit positive cells in lineages known to be affected by these mutations. In contrast, these mutations do not affect the number or histological organization of c-kit positive cells in the embryonic peripheral or central nervous systems, nor is the number or organization of c-kit positive cells detectably altered in Wv/Wv or Sld/Sld adult brain. Taken together, these results suggest that the Kit signaling pathway is not obligatory for the viability and/or migration of most c-kit expressing cells either because of functional redundancy with another signaling pathway or because the Kit pathway is involved in post-developmental processes of mature cells.  相似文献   

20.
In whole mounts of seminiferous tubules of C3H/101 F1 hybrid mice, spermatogonia were counted in various stages of the epithelial cycle. Furthermore, the total number of Sertoli cells per testis was estimated using the disector method. Subsequently, estimates were made of the total numbers of the different spermatogonial cell populations per testis.

The results of the cell counts indicate that the undifferentiated spermatogonia are actively proliferating from stage XI until stage IV. Three divisions of the undifferentiated spermatogonia are needed to obtain the number of A1 plus undifferentiated spermatogonia produced each epithelial cycle. Around stage VIII almost two-thirds of the Apr and all of the Aal spermatogonia differentiate into A1 spermatogonia. It was estimated that there are 2.5 × 106 differentiating spermatogonia and 3.3 × 105 undifferentiated spermatogonia per testis. There are about 35,000 stem cells per testis, constituting about 0.03% of all germ cells in the testis. It is concluded that the undifferentiated spermatogonia, including the stem cells, actively proliferate during about 50% of the epithelial cycle.  相似文献   


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