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1.
A number of years ago we reported that tight junctions between adjacent Sertoli cells subdivide the seminiferous epithelium into two compartments, basal and adluminal, thus forming the morphological basis of the blood-testis barrier. It is now generally believed that the special milieu created by the Sertoli cells in the adluminal compartment is essential for germ cell differentiation. In order to duplicate the compartmentalization that occurs in vivo, Sertoli cells were cultured in bicameral chambers on Millipore filters impregnated with a reconstituted basement membrane. Confluent monolayers of these cells were tall columnar (40–60 µ in height) and highly polarized. These Sertoli cell monolayers established electrical resistance that peaked when the Sertoli-Sertoli tight junctions developed in culture. In addition, the monolayers formed a permeability barrier to 3H-inulin and lanthanum nitrate. The bicameral chambers were utilized in a number of studies on protein secretion, and it was revealed that numerous proteens are secreted in a polarized manner. In another study, hormone- stimulated aromatase activity was measured in Sertoli cells grown on plastic culture dishes, plastic dishes coated with laminin or Matrigel, and in the bicameral chambers. Cell culture on basement membrane substrate decreased the FSH-dependent estrogen production. No estrogen production was observed when the Sertoli cells were cultured in the bicameral chambers. These results are in accord with the hypothesis that differentiated Sertoli cells lose their ability to metabolize androgen to estrogen in an hormone-dependent manner, whereas undifferentiated cells in culture, or in vivo, have a very active FSH-dependent aromatase activity. This bicameral culture system could serve as an important model system to examine various functions of Sertoli cells including interactions of Sertoli cells with germ, Leydig, and myoid cells.  相似文献   

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Summary Commonly used enzymic methods for the isolation of rat Seroli cells yield populations containing ∼15% germ cells. Although the germ cells become eliminated after several media changes, they could interferen with the use of Sertoli cells for critical studies during the first several days of culture. A brief treatment of Sertoli cell monolayer cultures with 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) was found to eliminate most of the residual contaiminating germ cells. The duration of this treatment varied from 1.0 to 10 min, depending on cell denisty in the culture, the degree of germ cell contamination, and the age of animals used for Sertoli cell isolation. In a study of 95% pure 7-d Sertoli cell cultures, the hypotonic treatment did not alter the DNA or RNA content per dish or the incorporation of [3H]uridine into total and poly A+RNA. Also, the hypotonic treatment did not alter specific Sertoli cell functions, i. e., secretion of Sertoli cell factor (inhibin) and stimulation of cAMP levels by follicle stimuting hormone in 2-d cultures. Androgen receptor concentration per dish was also not changed. Changes in several general metabolic parameters observed after hypotonic treatment of 2-d cultures were attributed primarily to loss of contaiminating germ cells. Consequently, hypotonic treatment can be used to eliminate contaminating germ cells from the Sertoli cell cultures without apparent detrimental effects on a number of Sertoli cell biochemical parameters. This may be of considerable importance when the purity of Sertoli cells is critical for the interpretation of experimental data. This work was supported in part by grants HD-1-P50-08338, HD-17795 (BMS), and HD-18186 (JJH) from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.  相似文献   

4.
The morphological response of the Sertoli cells to partial or complete withdrawal of testosterone was studied in adult rats following hypophysectomy or administration of ethane dimethanesulphonate (EDS), a toxicant known to destroy selectively the Leydig cells of the testis. To assess the role of germ cells in effecting changes to Sertoli cells following withdrawal of testosterone, germ cell-deficient rats with Sertoli-cell-only testes (SCO) were treated with EDS to remove the source of testosterone. At 6 days after hypophysectomy or 4,6 and 8 days after EDS treatment, stage VII and VIII seminiferous tubules showed degenerating germ cells and numerous basally-located vacuoles approximately 1–15 m in diameter. Ultrastructural analysis indicated that most of the vacuoles were multiple focal dilations of the intercellular space associated with Sertoli cell junctional complexes. In SCO rats, treatment with EDS resulted in a significant (P<0.05) increase in the formation of many vacuoles particularly in the base but also in the trunk of the Sertoli cells and again electron microscopic analysis showed multiple, localized expansions of the intercellular space associated with Sertoli cell junctional complexes. The appearance of intercellular spaces in SCO testes following androgen withdrawal cannot be attributed to shrinkage of degenerating germ cells since the seminiferous tubules did not contain germ cells. It is concluded that withdrawal of androgen induces early morphological alterations of the Sertoli cell junctional complexes in which the sites of membrane fusions representing tight junctions remain intact whereas the intercellular spaces exhibit major focal dilations. The results are discussed in relation to the fluid secretion by the seminiferous tubules which is regulated by the Sertoli cells.  相似文献   

5.
Previous studies from this laboratory have shown that Sertoli cell-enriched culture medium contained two immunologically and structurally related proteins designated CMB-22 and CMB-23 with Mr of 37,000 and 40,000, respectively. We have now demonstrated that both CMB-22 and CMB-23 are monomeric proteins with the following NH2-terminal amino acid sequences: CMB-22, NH2-TPDPSLDVEWNEWRTKHGKTYNMNEERLKR; CMB-23, NH2-XAPXPDPSLDVEXNEXRTK. These sequences are virtually identical except that CMB-23 has three extra NH2 terminus amino acids of X-A-P. Comparison of these sequences with those in the Protein Identification Resource revealed that they are unique proteins. CMB-22 and CMB-23 are highly concentrated in testes and their levels in this tissue increase with age. Studies using [35S]methionine incorporation and immunoprecipitation demonstrated that Sertoli cells synthesize and secrete these proteins in vitro. Because they seem not to have been isolated previously, are concentrated in and synthesized by the testes, and are structurally related, we propose that CMB-22 and CMB-23 be designated testin I and testin II, respectively. The distribution of these proteins in biological fluids were compared with those of testibumin and rat androgen binding protein (rABP), two other Sertoli cell proteins. The results suggest that testins, unlike testibumin and rABP, are not transported to the epididymis. Although the amount of testins secreted by Sertoli cells in vitro is similar to that of testibumin and rABP, the concentrations in testis and rete testis fluid are several orders of magnitude less than that of testibumin and rABP. These observations suggest that the secretion of these proteins in vivo might be suppressed by germ cells. The fact that 10 times more testins are secreted by tubules from immature rats than by those from adult rats and that there is an increase in the testicular content of testins following a single dose of busulfan, which depleted the germ cells from the seminiferous epithelium, supports this hypothesis. Thus, the secretion of testins by Sertoli cells appears to be tightly coupled to the presence of germ cells; there is an inverse relationship between the amount of testins in the testis and the number of germ cells. These results suggest that testins are unique testicular proteins that can be used to study Sertoli cell-germ cell interactions in the seminiferous epithelium.  相似文献   

6.
This review centers around studies which have used ethane dimethane sulphonate (EDS) selectively to destroy all of the Leydig cells in the adult rat testis. With additional manipulations such as testosterone replacement and/or experimental induction of severe seminiferous tubule damage in EDS-injected rats, the following questions have been addressed: 1) What are the roles and relative importance of testosterone and other non-androgenic Leydig cell products in normal spermatogenesis and testicular function in general? 2) What are the factors controlling Leydig cell proliferation and maturation? 3) Is it the Leydig cells or the seminiferous tubules (or both) which control the testicular vasculature? The findings emphasize that in the normal adult rat testis there is a complex interaction between the Leydig cells, the Sertoli (and/or peritubular) cells, the germ cells, and the vasculature, and that testosterone, but not other Leydig cell products, plays a central role in many of these interactions. The Leydig cells drive spermatogenesis via the secretion of testosterone which acts on the Sertoli and/or peritubular cells to create an environment which enables normal progression of germ cells through stage VII of the spermatogenic cycle. In addition, testosterone is involved in the control of the vasculature, and hence the formation of testicular interstitial fluid, presumably again via effects on the Sertoli and/or peritubular cells. When Leydig cells regenerate and mature after their destruction by EDS, it can be shown that both the rate and the location of regenerating Leydig cells is determined by an interplay between endocrine (LH and perhaps FSH) and paracrine factors; the latter emanate from the seminiferous tubules and are determined by the germ cell complement. Taken together with other data on the paracrine control of Leydig cell testosterone secretion by the seminiferous tubules, these findings demonstrate that the functions of all of the cell types in the testis are interwoven in a highly organized manner. This has considerable implications with regard to the concentration of research effort on in vitro studies of the testis, and is discussed together with the need for a multidisciplinary approach if the complex control of spermatogenesis is ever to be properly understood.  相似文献   

7.
Sertoli cells are a type of nurse cell in the seminiferous epithelium that are crucial for sustaining spermatogenesis by extending nutritional and energy support to the developing germ cells. Dysfunction of Sertoli cells could cause disordered spermatogenesis and reduced fertility in males. In this study, we focused on the expression and function of palmitoyl protein thioesterase 1 (PPT1), a lysosomal depalmitoylating enzyme, in Sertoli cells. Here, we show that PPT1 expression in Sertoli cells is responsive to cholesterol treatment and that specific knockout of Ppt1 in Sertoli cells causes male subfertility associated with poor sperm quality and a high ratio of sperm deformity. Specifically, Ppt1 deficiency leads to poor cell variably accompanied with abnormal lysosome accumulation and increased cholesterol levels in Sertoli cells. Further, Ppt1 deficiency results in poor adhesion of developing germ cells to Sertoli cells in the seminiferous epithelium, which is likely to be responsible for the reduced male fertility as a consequence of declines in sperm count and motility as well as a high incidence of sperm head deformity. In summary, PPT1 affects sperm quality and male fertility through regulating lysosomal function and cholesterol metabolism in Sertoli cells.  相似文献   

8.
Park CJ  Lee JE  Oh YS  Shim S  Nah WH  Choi KJ  Gye MC 《Theriogenology》2011,75(3):445-458
The expression of claudin-1 and -11, tight junctions (TJs) proteins was examined in immature and adult pheasant (Phasianus colchicus) testes. Claudin-1 and -11 cDNA were highly similar to those of human, mice, and chicken. Claudin-1 mRNA and protein (21 kDa) levels in immature testes were higher than those of adult testis. In immature testes until 6 weeks of age, Claudin-1 was found at contacts between adjacent Sertoli cells and between Sertoli cells and germ cells. In adult testis, Claudin-1 was found in early spermatocytes migrating the blood testis barrier (BTB). Blood vessels were positive for claudin-1. Claudin-11 mRNA and protein (21 kDa) increased during adulthood development of testis. In immature testis, Claudin-11 was found in apicolateral contacts between adjacent Sertoli cells, indicating its involvement in cell adhesion in immature testis. In adult testis, strong wavy Claudin-11 immunoreactivity was parallel to basal lamina at the basal part of seminiferous epithelium, indicating that Claudin-11 at the inter-Sertoli TJs may act as a structural element of the BTB. Weak Claudin-1 and -11 immunoreactivity at contacts between Sertoli cells to elongating/elongated spermatids, meiotic germ cells, and basal lamina suggests that they also participate in the cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix adhesion in pheasant testis. Testosterone increased claudin-11 mRNA in testis organ culture and Sertoli cell primary culture, suggesting positive regulation of claudin-11 gene by androgen in Sertoli cells of pheasant testis. This is the first report on the claudins expression at BTB in avian testis.  相似文献   

9.
Germ cell binding to rat Sertoli cells in vitro   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The interaction between male germ cells and Sertoli cells was studied in vitro by co-incubation experiments using isolated rat germ cells and primary cultures of Sertoli cells made germ cell-free by the differential sensitivity of germ cells to hypotonic shock. The germ cell/Sertoli cell interaction was examined morphologically with phase-contrast and scanning electron microscopy and then quantified by measuring radioactivity bound to Sertoli cell cultures after co-incubation with added [3H]leucine-labeled germ cells. Germ cell binding to Sertoli cell cultures was the result of specific adhesion between these two cell types, and several features of this specific adhesion were observed. First, germ cells adhered to Sertoli cell cultures under conditions during which spleen cells and red blood cells did not. Second, germ cells had a greater affinity for Sertoli cell cultures than they had for cultures of testicular peritubular cells or cerebellar astrocytes. Third, germ cells fixed with paraformaldehyde adhered to live Sertoli cultures while similarly fixed spleen cells adhered less tightly. Neither live nor paraformaldehyde-fixed germ cells adhered to fixed Sertoli cell cultures. Fourth, germ cell binding to Sertoli cell cultures was not immediate but increased steadily and approached a maximum at 4 h of co-incubation. Saturation of germ cell binding to Sertoli cell cultures occurred when more than 4200 germ cells were added per mm2 of Sertoli cell culture surface. Finally, germ cell binding to Sertoli cell cultures was eliminated when co-incubation was performed on ice. Based on these observations, we concluded that germ cell adhesion to Sertoli cells was specific, temperature-dependent, and required a viable Sertoli cell but not necessarily a viable germ cell. These results have important implications for understanding the complex interaction between Sertoli cells and germ cells within the seminiferous tubule and in the design of future experiments probing details of this interaction.  相似文献   

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Much of what is known about the molecular regulation and function of adult Sertoli cells has been inferred from in vitro studies of immature Sertoli cells. However, adult and immature cells differ in significant ways and, moreover, many Sertoli cell functions are regulated by conditions that are difficult to replicate in vitro. Our objective was to develop a procedure to isolate Sertoli cells rapidly and in sufficient number and purity to make it possible to assess Sertoli cell function immediately after the isolation of the cells. The isolation procedure described herein takes less than 4 h and does not require culturing the cells. From a single 4-mo-old adult rat, we routinely obtain 7.0 +/- 0.4 x 10(6) Sertoli cells per testis, and from a 21-mo-old rat, 7.2 +/- 0.4 x 10(6) Sertoli cells per testis. The purity, determined by morphologic analyses of plastic-embedded cells or after staining for tyrosine-tubulin or vimentin, averaged 80%. The contaminants typically included germ cells (10%) and myoid cells (10%). The germ cell-expressed genes protamine-2 and hemiferrin were not detected in the Sertoli cell preparations by Northern blot analyses, but the Sertoli cell-expressed genes clusterin, cathepsin L, and transferrin were highly expressed. Transferrin mRNA levels were greater in Sertoli cells isolated from aged than from young adult rats, consistent with previous analyses of whole testes; and cathepsin L mRNA levels were far more highly expressed in Sertoli cells isolated from stages VI-VII than from other stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium, also consistent with previous analyses of whole testes and isolated tubules. These studies indicate that the freshly isolated cells retain differentiated function, and thus it should be possible to assess the in vivo function of adult Sertoli cells by isolating the Sertoli cells and immediately assessing their function.  相似文献   

12.
Sertoli cell cultures were obtained from isolated seminiferous tubules of adult crab-eating macaques (Macaca fascicularis). Cells were identified by their morphological characteristics and their capacity to produce and release in the culture medium 17β-estradiol and androgen-binding protein (ABP). Several cells were undergoing mitosis. Karyological analysis showed both diploid and tetraploid metaphases. Patterns of nuclear scission were also observed.  相似文献   

13.
The present research was performed to isolate and study the effects of a low molecular weight (<1300 Da) parasite-associated substance, obtained from peritoneal fluids of female mice infected with Taenia crassiceps cysticerci, on seminiferous epithelium cells of male mice testis. The results showed an intense disruption of Sertoli cells and germ cells within the seminiferous tubules of experimental mice, along with the destruction of their gap junction (GJ). Significant generalized apoptosis of germ cells within seminiferous tubules was determined by TUNEL staining (P = 0.0159). In addition, a significant number of infiltrating macrophages were found in the luminal space of these seminiferous tubules (P < 0.0001). Finally, electron microscopy studies revealed structural and morphological abnormalities in the somatic cells (Sertoli and Leydig cells) and in the germ cells, primarily in the round and elongate spermatids.  相似文献   

14.
Gelsolin, an actin-binding and severing protein present in many mammalian cells, was characterized in human testis. Although abundant in testicular extracts, gelsolin was not detected in purified spermatogenic cells by immunoblot analysis. Immunofluorescence studies of testis sections showed that gelsolin has two main localizations: peritubular cells and the seminiferous epithelium. In peritubular cells, gelsolin was present together with α-SM actin, in agreement with the myoid cell characteristics of these cells. In a large proportion of the tubules, gelsolin was found mainly, together with actin, in the apical part of the seminiferous epithelium. This localization of gelsolin also was observed in seminiferous tubules with a partial or complete absence of germinal cells, which evokes a presence of gelsolin at the apex of Sertoli cells. However, in normal testis, a complex pattern of gelsolin labeling was also present, mostly in the apical third of the epithelium, around cells or groups of cells, mainly spermatids, and, less frequently, in various other localizations from the apical to the basal part of the seminiferous epithelium. Taken together, these observations suggest that gelsolin may play different functions in the seminiferous epithelium: (1) regulation of the dynamic alterations of the actin cytoskeleton in the apical cytoplasm of Sertoli cells, and (2) modification of actin filaments assemblies in specific structures at germ cell-Sertoli cell contacts. Thereby, the actin-modulating properties of gelsolin are probably involved in reorganization of the seminiferous epithelium related to germ cell differentiation. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 48:63–70, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The present investigation documents morphological characteristics of human Sertoli cells of aged males. Testicular material was obtained from 35 patients (age 62–84 years) with carcinoma of the prostate who had received no previous anticancer therapy. As revealed by light and electron microscopy the appearance of the germinal epithelium showed great individual variations. In all cases examined, however, the occurrence of multinucleate Sertoli cells was a common finding. In seminiferous tubules with intact spermatogenesis these cells closely resembled the normally occurring variants, whereas they displayed features reminiscent of immaturity in the absence of germ cells. It is hypothesized that the nuclei of Sertoli cells in the special situation of aging may resume the capacity to divide, an ability normally restricted to immature cells. Thus, mitosis without subsequent cytokinesis might be an explanation for the formation of multinucleate Sertoli cells.The authors wish to thank Dr. R. Hubmann, Hamburg, for kindly supplying the testicular material. The excellent technical assistance of Mrs. E. Roosen-Runge, Mrs. E. Schäfer, and Mrs. A. Stromeyer is gratefully acknowledgedSupported by grants from the Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftPresented in part at the Kleinkonferenz der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft, Schloß Auel, October 3–5, 1980  相似文献   

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Several in vivo studies have reported the presence of immunoreactive transforming growth factor-β's (TGF-β's) in testicular cells at defined stages of their differentiation. The most pronounced changes in TGF-β1 and TGF-β2 immunoreactivity occurred during spermatogenesis. In the present study we have investigated whether germ cells and Sertoli cells are able to secrete bioactive TGF-β's in vitro, using the CCl64 mink lung epithelial cell line as bioassay for the measurement of TGF-β. In cellular lysates, TGF-β bioactivity was only observed following heat-treatment, indicating that within these cells TGF-β is present in a latent form. To our surprise, active TGF-β could be detected in the culture supernatant of germ cells and Sertoli cells without prior heat-treatment. This suggests that these cells not only produce and release TGF-β in a latent form, but that they also release a factor which can convert latent TGF-β into its active form. Following heat-activation of these culture supernatant's, total TGF-β bioactivity increased 6- to 9-fold. Spermatocytes are the cell type that releases most bioactive TGF-β during a 24 h culture period, although round and elongated spermatids and Sertoli cells also secrete significant amounts of TGF-β. The biological activity of TGF-β could be inhibited by neutralizing antibodies against TGF-β1 (spermatocytes and round spermatids) and TGF-β2 (round and elongating spermatids). TGF-β activity in the Sertoli cell culture supernatant was inhibited slightly by either the TGF-β1 and TGF-β2 neutralizing antibody.These in vitro data suggest that germ cells and Sertoli cells release latent TGF-β's. Following secretion, the TGF-β's are converted to a biological active form that can interact with specific TGF-β receptors. These results strengthen the hypothesis that TGF-β's may play a physiological role in germ cell proliferation/differentiation and Sertoli cell function.  相似文献   

18.
Sertoli cells play a number of roles in supporting spermatogenesis, including structural organization, physical and paracrine support of germ cells, and secretion of factors necessary for germ cell development. Studies with microtubule disrupting compounds indicate that intact microtubule networks are crucial for normal spermatogenesis. However, treatment with toxicants and pharmacologic agents that target microtubules lack cell-type selectivity and may therefore elicit direct effects on germ cells, which also require microtubule-mediated activities for division and morphological transformation. To evaluate the importance of Sertoli cell microtubule-based activities for spermatogenesis, an adenoviral vector that overexpresses the microtubule nucleating protein, gamma-tubulin, was used to selectively disrupt microtubule networks in Sertoli cells in vivo. gamma-Tubulin overexpression was observed to cause redistribution of Sertoli cell microtubule networks, and overexpression of a gamma-tubulin-enhanced green fluorescent protein fusion protein was observed to localize to the site of elongate spermatid head attachment to the seminiferous epithelium.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Various cell types of the rat testis during pubescence, including germ, Sertoli, and Leydig cells, were partially enriched. The fractions were tested for the presence, binding, and secretion of H-Y antigen. The main results are: Immature germ cells are H-Y antigen-negative until the late diploid stages, and late primary spermatocytes or spermatids become positive; the somatic cells of the gonad are positive at all ages examined (18 days old to adulthood). Secretion of H-Y antigen is restricted to the Sertoli cell fraction. Binding of externally supplied antigen takes place on Leydig cells; the Sertoli cell surface will be saturated because of active secretion; there is no binding to germ cells. Thus, immature germ cells seem to be the only H-Y antigen-negative cells of the male organism, and the Sertoli cells seem to be the only ones to secrete H-Y antigen.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of this review is to summarize ways in which in vitro approaches have allowed us to investigate several aspects of gametogenesis in the male. In our laboratory, we have established both organ culture and cell co-culture methodologies and applied them to questions focused on cellular and molecular events important for development of primitive spermatogonia, or gonocytes, in testes of neonatal rats. We have described their postnatal reinitiation of mitosis and their migration to the basal lamina in anticipation of basal compartment formation and, through use of these in vitro systems, we have identified several mechanisms regulating these processes. These include matrix influence on mitosis and migration, adhesive mechanisms active between gonocytes and Sertoli cells, and involvement of the Kit receptor on germ cells and its ligand from Sertoli cells in supporting gonocyte migration, as described below.  相似文献   

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