Abstract: | The distribution of phosphodiesterase forms in somatic and germ cells, and their variations during testicular development and germ cell differentiation have been investigated. Seminiferous tubules from immature mice and Sertoli cells in culture possessed two enzyme activities which were comparable to forms described for different tissues and species: (a) a calcium-calmodulin-dependent enzyme with high affinity for guanosine 3',5'-(cyclic)-monophosphate (cGMP), and (b) a calcium-calmodulin-independent enzyme with high affinity for adenosine 3',5'-(cyclic)-monophosphate (cAMP) the activity of which increased in cultured Sertoli cells after treatment with FSH or dibutyryl cAMP. Seminiferous tubules from adult animals and germ cells at the meiotic and post-meiotic stage of differentiation possessed two enzyme forms that could be distinguished from those present in somatic cells of the seminiferous tubules: (a) a calcium-calmodulin-dependent form with high affinity for both cAMP and cGMP, similar to forms described in other tissues from different species, and (b) a calcium-calmodulin-independent phosphodiesterase with high affinity for cAMP and present only in post-meiotic cells, previously identified also in germ cells of the rat. |