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1.
Tubulobulbar complexes are finger-like structures that form at the interface between maturing spermatids and Sertoli cells prior to sperm release and at the interface between two Sertoli cells near the base of the seminiferous epithelium. They originate in areas previously occupied by actin filament-associated intercellular adhesion plaques known as ectoplasmic specializations. Actin filaments also are associated with tubulobulbar complexes where they appear to form a network, rather than the tightly packed bundles found in ectoplasmic specializations. Cofilin, a calcium-independent actin-depolymerizing protein, previously has been identified in the testis, but has not been localized to specific structures in the seminiferous epithelium. To determine if cofilin is found in Sertoli cells and is concentrated at actin-rich structures, we reacted fixed frozen sections of rat testis, fixed fragmented tissue, and blots of seminiferous epithelium with pan-specific and non-muscle cofilin antibodies. In addition, GeneChip microarrays (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA) were utilized to determine the abundance of mRNA for all cofilin isoforms in Sertoli cells. Using the monoclonal pan-specific cofilin antibody, we found specific labeling exclusively at tubulobulbar complexes and not at ectoplasmic specializations. On one-dimensional (1D) Western blots this antibody reacted monospecifically with one band, and on 2D blots reacted with two dots, which we interpret as phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated forms of a single cofilin isotype. Messenger RNA for non-muscle cofilin in Sertoli cells is about 8.5-fold higher than for muscle-type cofilin. To confirm that the non-muscle isoform of cofilin is present at tubulobulbar complexes, we used antibodies specific to non-muscle cofilin for immunofluorescent localization. As with the pan-specific antibody, we found that the non-muscle cofilin antibody exclusively labeled tubulobulbar complexes. Results presented here indicate that non-muscle cofilin is concentrated at tubulobulbar complexes. Our results also indicate that cofilin is not concentrated at ectoplasmic specializations.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated, using indirect immunofluorescence techniques, the possibility that vinculin is a component of Sertoli cell ectoplasmic specializations. Affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies produced against human platelet vinculin were used to probe fixed frozen sections of rat testis. Specific fluorescence occurs in Sertoli cell regions adjacent to spermatids and to basally situated junctional complexes, sites at which ectoplasmic specializations are known to occur. Staining also occurs in Sertoli cell regions associated with tubulobulbar complexes. The antibody also labels focal contacts in cultured human dermal fibroblasts, apical junctional sites of rat epididymal epithelium, and dense plaques of smooth muscle. Our results are consistent with the prediction that vinculin is likely a component of ectoplasmic specializations and are also consistent with the hypothesis that these structures are a form of actin-associated adhesion complex.  相似文献   

3.
The Sertoli cell ectoplasmic specialization is a unique junctional structure involved in the interaction between elongating spermatids and Sertoli cells. We have previously shown that suppression of testicular testosterone in adult rats by low-dose testosterone and estradiol (TE) treatment causes the premature detachment of step 8 round spermatids from the Sertoli cell. Because these detaching round spermatids would normally associate with the Sertoli cell via the ectoplasmic specialization, we hypothesized that ectoplasmic specializations would be absent in the seminiferous epithelium of TE-treated rats, and the lack of this junction would cause round spermatids to detach. In this study, we investigated Sertoli cell ectoplasmic specializations in normal and TE-treated rat testis using electron microscopy and localization of known ectoplasmic specialization-associated proteins (espin, actin, and vinculin) by immunocytochemistry and confocal microscopy. In TE-treated rats where round spermatid detachment was occurring, ectoplasmic specializations of normal morphology were observed opposite the remaining step 8 spermatids in the epithelium and, importantly, in the adluminal Sertoli cell cytoplasm during and after round spermatid detachment. When higher doses of testosterone were administered to promote the reattachment of all step 8 round spermatids, newly elongating spermatids associated with ectoplasmic specialization proteins within 2 days. We concluded that the Sertoli cell ectoplasmic specialization structure is qualitatively normal in TE-treated rats, and thus the absence of this structure is unlikely to be the cause of round spermatid detachment. We suggest that defects in adhesion molecules between round spermatids and Sertoli cells are likely to be involved in the testosterone-dependent detachment of round spermatids from the seminiferous epithelium.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, we demonstrate that specialized junction plaques that occur between Sertoli cells and spermatids in the rat testis support microtubule translocation in vitro. During spermatogenesis, Sertoli cells are attached to spermatids by specialized adhesion junctions termed ectoplasmic specializations (ESs). These structures consist of regions of the plasma membrane adherent to the spermatid head, a submembrane layer of tightly packed actin filaments, and an attached cistern of endoplasmic reticulum. It has been proposed that motor proteins on the endoplasmic reticulum interact with adjacent microtubules to translocate the junction plaques, and hence the attached spermatids, within the epithelium. If this hypothesis is true, then isolated junctions should support microtubule transport. To verify this prediction, we have mechanically isolated rat spermatids, together with their attached ESs, and tested them for their ability to transport microtubules in vitro. Most assays were done in the presence of 2 mg/ml testicular cytosol and at room temperature. ESs attached to spermatids supported microtubule translocation. In some cases in which motility events were detected, microtubules moved smoothly over the junction site. In others, the movement was slow but progressive, saltatory and "inch-worm-like." No motility was detected in the absence of exogenous ATP or in the presence of apyrase (an enzyme that catalyses the breakdown of ATP). Our results are consistent with the microtubule-based motility hypothesis of spermatid translocation.  相似文献   

5.
Early morphological changes in the rat Sertoli cell induced by the fungicide carbendazim (methyl-2-benzimidazole carbamate; MBC), a metabolite of benomyl, were examined. Adult rats were treated with single doses of MBC (400mg/kg) or vehicle and examined by light and electron microscopy at 3 hr post-treatment. Sloughing of elongating spermatid clusters was observed in all stages of spermatogenesis, except for Stages III–V. Cleavage occurred near the apical region of the seminiferous epithelium where cytoplasmic processes of the Sertoli cell surround the heads of elongating spermatids. The cleaved cytoplasm remained attached to the sloughed spermatids and ectoplasmic specializations remained undamaged. Intact microtubules were observed in the apical Sertoli cell cytoplasm (including sloughed tissues) but were decreased in the body region, where aggregates of mitochondria were found. Cytoplasm near the cleavage site exhibited rarefaction, which was associated with swollen cisternae of endoplasmic reticulum. It appears that the mechanism of germ cell sloughing induced by MBC treatment involves the disruption of microtubules in the body region of the Sertoli cell, the retraction of cytoplasmic organelles and the swelling of endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

6.
In this study, we report sites in the seminiferous epithelium of the rat testis that are immunoreactive with antibodies to the intermediate chain of cytoplasmic dynein and kinesin II. The study was done to determine whether or not microtubule-dependent motor proteins are present in Sertoli cell regions involved with spermatid translocation. Sections and epithelial fragments of perfusion-fixed rat testis were probed with an antibody (clone 74.1) to the intermediate chain of cytoplasmic dynein (IC74) and to kinesin-II. Labeling with the antibody to cytoplasmic dynein was dramatically evident in Sertoli cell regions surrounding apical crypts containing attached spermatids and known to contain unique intercellular attachment plaques. The antibody to kinesin II reacted only with spermatid tails. The levels of cytoplasmic dynein visible on immunoblots of supernatants collected from spermatid/junction complexes treated with an actin-severing enzyme (gelsolin) were greater than those of controls, indicating that at least some of the dynein may have been associated with Sertoli cell junction plaques attached to spermatids. Results are consistent with the conclusion that an isoform of cytoplasmic dynein may be responsible for the apical translocation of elongate spermatids that occurs before sperm release. Also, this is the first report of kinesin-II in mammalian spermatid tails.  相似文献   

7.
The ectoplasmic (‘junctional’) specialization, a subsurface modification of the Sertoli cell that is often seen facing germ cells, was studied in relation to the development and maturation of these germ cells. This structure is composed of sub-surface bundles of filaments and more deeply placed endoplasmic reticulum. The data indicate that these subsurface modifications of Sertoli cells are reutilized in a cyclic fashion, being transferred from their position facing late spermatids to one opposing less mature germ cells. Ectoplasmic specializations appeared to function mechanically in grasping the heads of the spermatids which are undergoing the elongation and maturation phases of spermiogenesis rather than in actually attaching Sertoli cells to these germ cells. It is postulated that the ectoplasmic specialization imparts rigidity to that area of the Sertoli cell that surrounds the head region of the germ cell, forming a recess and a mantle by which the germ cell may be moved toward the base or toward the surface of the seminiferous epithelium. The observed linkage of microtubules to the cisternae of the complex provided a morphological basis for the changes in the cytoarchitecture of the Sertoli cell, which must accompany these movements.  相似文献   

8.
To examine the possible role of microtubule-based transport in testicular function, we used immunofluorescent techniques to study the presence and localization of the microtubule mechanoenzymes cytoplasmic dynein (a slow-growing end-directed motor) and kinesin (a fast-growing end-directed motor) within rat testis. Cytoplasmic dynein immunofluorescence was observed in Sertoli cells during all stages of spermatogenesis, with a peak in apical cytoplasm during stages IX-XIV. Cytoplasmic dynein immunofluorescence was also localized within Sertoli cells to steps 9-14 (stages IX-XIV) germ cell-associated ectoplasmic specializations. In germ cells, cytoplasmic dynein immunofluorescence was observed in manchettes of steps 15-17 (stages I-IV) spermatids, and small, hollow circular structures were seen in the cytoplasm of step 17 and step 18 spermatids during stages V and VI. Kinesin immunofluorescence was observed in manchettes of steps 10-18 spermatids (stages X-VI). The stage-dependent apical Sertoli cell cytoplasmic dynein immunofluorescence, in conjunction with the previously reported orientation of Sertoli cell microtubules (slow-growing ends toward the lumen) and peak secretion of androgen-binding protein and transferrin, is consistent with the hypothesis that cytoplasmic dynein is involved in Sertoli cell protein transport and secretion. Further, the localization of cytoplasmic dynein and kinesin to manchettes is consistent with current hypotheses concerning manchette function.  相似文献   

9.
Tubulobulbar complexes may be part of the mechanism by which intercellular adhesion junctions are internalized by Sertoli cells during sperm release. These complexes develop in regions where Sertoli cells are attached to adjacent cells by intercellular adhesion junctions termed ectoplasmic specializations. At sites where Sertoli cells are attached to spermatid heads, tubulobulbar complexes consist of fingerlike processes of the spermatid plasma membrane, corresponding invaginations of the Sertoli cell plasma membrane, and a surrounding cuff of modified Sertoli cell cytoplasm. At the terminal ends of the complexes occur clusters of vesicles. Here we show that tubulobulbar complexes develop in regions previously occupied by ectoplasmic specializations and that the structures share similar molecular components. In addition, the adhesion molecules nectin 2 and nectin 3, found in the Sertoli cell and spermatid plasma membranes, respectively, are concentrated at the distal ends of tubulobulbar complexes. We also demonstrate that double membrane bounded vesicles are associated with the ends of tubulobulbar complexes and nectin 3 is present on spermatids, but is absent from spermatozoa released from the epithelium. These results are consistent with the conclusion that Sertoli cell and spermatid membrane adhesion domains are internalized together by tubulobulbar complexes. PKCalpha, a kinase associated with endocytosis of adhesion domains in other systems, is concentrated at tubulobulbar complexes, and antibodies to endosomal and lysosomal (LAMP1, SGP1) markers label the cluster of vesicles associated with the ends of tubulobulbar complexes. Our results are consistent with the conclusion that tubulobulbar complexes are involved with the disassembly of ectoplasmic specializations and with the internalization of intercellular membrane adhesion domains during sperm release.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Tubulobulbar complexes are actin-related double-membrane projections that resemble podosomes in other systems and form at intercellular junctions in the seminiferous epithelium of the mammalian testis. They are proposed to internalize intact junctions during sperm release and during the translocation of spermatocytes through basal junction complexes between neighboring Sertoli cells. In this study we probe apical tubulobulbar complexes in fixed epithelial fragments and fixed frozen sections of rat and mouse testes for junction molecules reported to be present at apical sites of attachment (ectoplasmic specializations) between Sertoli cells and spermatids. The adhesion molecules nectin 2 (PVRL2), nectin 3 (PVRL3) and alpha 6 integrin (ITGA6) are present in the elongate parts of tubulobulbar complexes and concentrated at their distal ends. Tubulobulbar complexes contain cortactin (CTTN), a key component of podosomes, and vesicles at the distal ends of tubulobulbar complexes that contain junction molecules are related to early endosome antigen (EEA1). N-cadherin (CDH2), a protein reported to be present at ectoplasmic specializations, is not localized to these unique junctions or to tubulobulbar complexes but, rather, is primarily concentrated at desmosomes in basal regions of the epithelium. Our results are consistent with the conclusion that tubulobulbar complexes are podosome-like structures that are responsible for internalizing intact intercellular junctions during spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
Sertoli cells of the ground squirrel (Spermophilus lateralis), a seasonal breeder, were examined by light and electron microscopy and their structure, particularly the organization of the cytoskeleton, was related to events that occur in the seminiferous epithelium during spermatogenesis. Among the events considered and described are the apical movement of elongate spermatids, withdrawal of residual cytoplasm from germ cells, transport of smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) between the base and apex of the Sertoli cells, and sperm release. These events are dramatically evident in this species because the seminiferous epithelium is thin, i.e., there are few germ cells, and both the germ cells and Sertoli cells are large. Sertoli cells of the ground squirrel have a remarkably well developed cytoskeleton. Microfilaments occur throughout the cell but are most evident in ectoplasmic specializations associated with junctions. Intermediate filaments occur around the nucleus, as a layer at the base of the cell, and adjacent to desmosome-like junctions with germ cells. Intermediate filaments, together with microtubules, are also abundant in regions of the cell involved with the transport of SER, in cytoplasm associated with elongate spermatids, and in processes that extend into the residual cytoplasm of germ cells. Our observations of ultrastructure are consistent with the hypothesis that Sertoli cell microtubules are involved with the movement of germ cells within the seminiferous epithelium, and further implicate these structures as possibly playing a role in the retraction of residual cytoplasm from germ cells and the intracellular transport of SER. The abundance and organization of intermediate filaments suggest that these cytoskeletal elements may also be involved with events that occur during spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
Using commercial monoclonal antibodies against actin and tubulin (alpha and beta), the respective antigens were localized on semithin and ultrathin sections of the rat testis. Tubulin immunofluorescence was found in the socalled manchette surrounding the heads of the maturating spermatids as well as the sperm tail. The distribution pattern varied with sperm development. Modified Sertoli cells found at the transition between the seminiferous tubules and the rete testis displayed much filamentous tubulin-reactive material. The immunofluorescence findings could be confirmed at the ultrastructural level using the indirect immunogold method. Actin immunofluorescence was demonstrated in vascular smooth muscle cells, interstitial macrophages and - most intensely - in peritubular cells. Inside the seminiferous tubules the Sertoli cell junctions and the ectoplasmic specializations of the Sertoli cells that follow the outer contour of spermatid heads displayed distinct actin immunofluorescence. In addition to the locations mentioned, actin-like immunoreactivity was visualized at the ultrastructural level in the chromatoid body and the subacrosomal space of spermatids as well as on the outer dense fibers of the sperm tail. Immunoblotting experiments with actin antibodies showed that in extracts from testicular spermatozoa, intact or fragmented into heads and tails, from isolated Sertoli cells grown in vitro, and from testis tissue in addition to authentic actin a protein was present in sperm tail extracts that strongly bound the actin antibody. This protein may be an actin-related protein and may be responsible for the actin-like immunoreactivity of the outer dense fibers of the sperm tail.  相似文献   

14.
Adjudin, an analogue of lonidamine, affects adhesion between Sertoli and most germ cells, resulting in reversible infertility in rats, rabbits and dogs. Previous studies have described the apical ectoplasmic specialization, a hybrid-type of Sertoli cell–elongating/elongated spermatid adhesive junction, as a key target of adjudin. In this study, we ask if the function of the blood–testis barrier which is constituted by co-existing tight junctions, desmosome-gap junctions and basal ectoplasmic specializations can be maintained when the seminiferous epithelium is under assault by adjudin. We report herein that administration of a single oral dose of adjudin to adult rats increased the levels of several tight junction and basal ectoplasmic specialization proteins during germ cell loss from the seminiferous epithelium. These findings were corroborated by a functional in vitro experiment when Sertoli cells were cultured on Matrigel?-coated bicameral units in the presence of adjudin and transepithelial electrical resistance was quantified across the epithelium. Indeed, the Sertoli cell permeability barrier was shown to become tighter after adjudin treatment as evidenced by an increase in transepithelial electrical resistance. Equally important, the blood–testis barrier in adjudin-treated rats was shown to be intact 2 weeks post-treatment when its integrity was monitored following vascular administration of inulin-fluorescein isothiocyanate which failed to permeate past the barrier and enter into the adluminal compartment. These results illustrate that a unique mechanism exists to maintain blood–testis barrier integrity at all costs, irrespective of the presence of germ cells in the seminiferous epithelium of the testis.  相似文献   

15.
Bundles of microtubules occur adjacent to ectoplasmic specializations (ESs) that line Sertoli cell crypts and support developing spermatids. These microtubules are oriented parallel to the direction of spermatid movement during spermatogenesis. We propose a model in which ESs function as vehicles, and microtubules as tracks, for microtubule-based transport of spermatids through the seminiferous epithelium. Microtubule polarity provides the basis for the direction of force generation by available mechanoenzymes. As part of a more general study designed to investigate the potential role of microtubule-based transport during spermatogenesis, we have studied the polarity of cytoplasmic microtubules of Sertoli cells. Rat testis blocks were incubated in a lysis/decoration buffer, with and without exogenous purified bovine brain tubulin. This treatment results in the decoration of endogenous microtubules with curved tubulin protofilament sheets (seen as hooks in cross section). The direction of curvature of the hooks indicates microtubule polarity; that is, clockwise hooks are seen when viewing microtubules from the plus to the minus end. We found that, in Sertoli cells, most of the hooks were orientated in the same direction. Significantly, when viewed from the base of the epithelium, hooks pointed in a clockwise direction. The clockwise direction of dynein arms on axonemes of sperm tails, in the same section, provided an internal check of the section orientation. Electron micrographs of fields of seminiferous epithelium were assembled into montages for quantitative analysis of microtubule polarity. Our data indicate that Sertoli cell cytoplasmic microtubules are of uniform polarity and are orientated with their minus ends toward the cell periphery. These observations have significant implications for our proposed model of microtubule-based transport of spermatids through the seminiferous epithelium.  相似文献   

16.
Fyn is a member of the Src family of non-receptor-type tyrosine kinases and plays an important role in signal transductions regulating cell proliferation and differentiation. Fyn immunoreactivity was localized in the Sertoli cells of mouse testes. Although fyn-deficient adult male mice were fertile, a significant reduction in testis weight and degenerated germ cells were observed at 3 and 4 wk of age. Electron microscopic examination revealed that fyn -/- testis has ultrastructural abnormalities in the specialized junctional structures of the Sertoli cells, the ectoplasmic specializations. Unusual vesicular structures were found in the actin filament layers of the ectoplasmic specializations of mutant mice. Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated that both Fyn and actin filaments were concentrated in the areas of ectoplasmic specializations. At these sites, a high level of phosphotyrosine was also immunostained in wild-type testes, whereas phosphotyrosine immunoreactivity was reduced in fyn -/- testes. Immunoblot analyses revealed that Fyn was mainly distributed within the Triton X-100-insoluble cytoskeletal fraction prepared from wild-type testes, suggesting that Fyn might be associated with cytoskeletal proteins such as actin filaments. These findings suggest that Fyn kinase functions at the ectoplasmic specializations of the Sertoli cells in the testes, regulating the dynamics of cytoskeletal proteins. Fyn-mediated signal transduction in the Sertoli cells may affect the survival and differentiation of germ cells at a specific stage during spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

17.
Using pan-kinesin antibodies to screen a differentiating C2C12 cell library, we identified the kinesin proteins KIF3A, KIF3B, and conventional kinesin heavy chain to be present in differentiating skeletal muscle. We compared the expression and subcellular localization characteristics of these kinesins in myogenic cells to others previously identified in muscle, neuronal, and mitotic systems (KIF1C, KIF3C, and mitotic-centromere-associated kinesin). Because members of the KIF3 subfamily of kinesin-related proteins showed altered subcellular fractionation characteristics in differentiating cells, we focused our study of kinesins in muscle on the function of kinesin-II. Kinesin-II is a motor complex comprised of dimerized KIF3A and KIF3B proteins and a tail-associated protein, KAP. The Xenopus homologue of KIF3B, Xklp3, is predominantly localized to the region of the Golgi apparatus, and overexpression of motorless-Xklp3 in Xenopus A6 cells causes mislocalization of Golgi components (). In C2C12 myoblasts and myotubes, KIF3B is diffuse and punctate, and not primarily associated with the Golgi. Overexpression of motorless-KIF3B does not perturb localization of Golgi components in myogenic cells, and myofibrillogenesis is normal. In adult skeletal muscle, KIF3B colocalizes with the excitation-contraction-coupling membranes. We propose that these membranes, consisting of the transverse-tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum, are dynamic structures in which kinesin-II may function to actively assemble and maintain in myogenic cells.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Using commercial monoclonal antibodies against actin and tubulin ( and ), the respective antigens were localized on semithin and ultrathin sections of the rat testis. Tubulin immunofluorescence was found in the socalled manchette surrounding the heads of the maturating spermatids as well as the sperm tail. The distribution pattern varied with sperm development. Modified Sertoli cells found at the transition between the seminiferous tubules and the rete testis displayed much filamentous tubulin-reactive material. The immunofluorescence findings could be confirmed at the ultrastructural level using the indirect immunogold method. Actin immunofluorescence was demonstrated in vascular smooth muscle cells, interstitial macrophages and — most intensely — in peritubular cells. Inside the seminiferous tubules the Sertoli cell junctions and the ectoplasmic specializations of the Sertoli cells that follow the outer contour of spermatid heads displayed distinct actin immunofluorescence. In addition to the locations mentioned, actin-like immunoreactivity was visualized at the ultrastructural level in the chromatoid body and the subacrosomal space of spermatids as well as on the outer dense fibers of the sperm tail.Immunoblotting experiments with actin antibodies showed that in extracts from testicular spermatozoa, intact or fragmented into heads and tails, from isolated Sertoli cells grown in vitro, and from testis tissue in addition to authentic actin a protein was present in sperm tail extracts that strongly bound the actin antibody. This protein may be an actin-related protein and may be responsible for the actin-like immunoreactivity of the outer dense fibers of the sperm tail.  相似文献   

19.
In mammals, 15 to 20 kinesins are thought to mediate vesicle transport. Little is known about the identity of vesicles moved by each kinesin or the functional significance of such diversity. To characterize the transport mediated by different kinesins, we developed a novel strategy to visualize vesicle‐bound kinesins in living cells. We applied this method to cultured neurons and systematically determined the localization and transport parameters of vesicles labeled by different members of the Kinesin‐1, ‐2, and ‐3 families. We observed vesicle labeling with nearly all kinesins. Only six kinesins bound vesicles that undergo long‐range transport in neurons. Of these, three had an axonal bias (KIF5B, KIF5C and KIF13B), two were unbiased (KIF1A and KIF1Bβ), and one transported only in dendrites (KIF13A). Overall, the trafficking of vesicle‐bound kinesins to axons or dendrites did not correspond to their motor domain preference, suggesting that on‐vesicle regulation is crucial for kinesin targeting. Surprisingly, several kinesins were associated with populations of somatodendritic vesicles that underwent little long‐range transport. This assay should be broadly applicable for investigating kinesin function in many cell types.  相似文献   

20.
The tight junctions between Sertoli cells were examined by freeze-fracture in 3-month-old prenatally irradiated rats, whose seminiferous tubules are devoid of germ cells. The replicas from irradiated tubules show elaborate interdigitations of the lateral membranes of Sertoli cells and very extensive tight junctions. These junctions are characterized by a great number of continuous parallel or complex interweaving strands of intramembranous particles, preferentially associated with E fracture faces. The presence of highly cross-linked tight junctional strands is compatible with an epithelium deprived of germ cells, with a reduced need for flexibility. Anomalous ectoplasmic specializations, consisting of groups of cisternae arranged perpendicularly to the lateral surface, are found in the irradiated tubules. These structures may be involved in a storage mechanism of redundant lateral membrane resulting from the elimination of germ cells. Typical gap junctions, intercalated between the tight junctional strands, are larger and more frequently found in treated animals than in controls. These findings indicate that a very tight permeability barrier seems to be established in the irradiated testis even in the absence of germ cells. Thus, the formation and maintenance of Sertoli tight junctions do not appear to be directly dependent on the presence of germ cells. Nevertheless, the alterations detected in the tight junction architecture and in the ectoplasmic specializations indicate that maturing germ cells probably contribute to the functional organization of the blood—testis barrier in the normal testis.  相似文献   

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