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1.
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   

2.
Spermatogenesis is a complex process of terminal differentiation wherein mature sperm are produced. In the first wave of mouse spermatogenesis, different spermatogenic cells appear at specific time points, and their appearance is expected to be accompanied by changes in specific protein expression patterns. In this study, we used 2D-PAGE and MALDI-TOF/TOF technology to construct a comparative proteome profile for mouse testis at specific time points (days 0, 7, 14, 21, 28, and 60 postpartum). We identified 362 differential protein spots corresponding to 257 different proteins. Further cluster analysis revealed 6 expression patterns, and bioinformatics analysis revealed that each pattern was related to many specific cell processes. Among them, 28 novel proteins with unknown functions neither in somatic cells nor germ cells were identified, 8 of which were found to be uniquely or highly expressed in mouse testes via comparison with the GNF SymAtlas database. Further, we randomly selected 7 protein spots and the above 8 novel proteins to verify the expression pattern via Western blotting and RT-PCR, and 6 proteins with little information in testis were further investigated to explore their cellular localization during spermatogenesis by performing immunohistochemistry for the mouse testis tissue. Taken together, the above results reveal an important proteome profile that is functional during the first wave of mouse spermatogenesis, and they provide a strong basis for further research.  相似文献   

3.
Normal spermatogenesis is essential for reproduction and depends on proper spermatogonial stem cell (SSC) function. Genes and signaling pathways that regulate SSC function have not been well defined. We report that glial cell-line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) signaling through the RET tyrosine kinase/GFRA1 receptor complex is required for spermatogonial self-renewal in mice. GFRA1 and RET expression was identified in a subset of gonocytes at birth, was restricted to SSCs during normal spermatogenesis, and RET expressing cells were abundant in a cryptorchid model of SSC self-renewal. We used the whole-testis transplantation technique to overcome the limitation of neonatal lethality of Gdnf-, Gfra1-, and Ret-deficient mice and found that each of these genes is required for postnatal spermatogenesis and not for embryological testes development. Each mutant testis shows severe SSC depletion by Postnatal Day 7 during the first wave of spermatogenesis. These defects were due to lack of SSC proliferation and an inability of SSCs to maintain an undifferentiated state. Our results demonstrate that GDNF-mediated RET signaling is critical for the fate of undifferentiated spermatogonia and that abnormalities in this pathway may contribute to male infertility and testicular germ cell tumors.  相似文献   

4.
Translocator protein (TSPO) is a high affinity 18 kDa drug- and cholesterol-binding protein strongly expressed in steroidogenic tissues where it mediates cholesterol transport into mitochondria and steroid formation. Testosterone formation by Leydig cells in the testis is critical for the regulation of spermatogenesis and male fertility. Male germ cell development comprises two main phases, the pre-spermatogenesis phase occurring from fetal life to infancy and leading to spermatogonial stem cell (SSC) formation, and spermatogenesis, which consists of repetitive cycles of germ cell mitosis, meiosis and differentiation, starting with SSC differentiation and ending with spermiogenesis and spermatozoa formation. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms controlling the progression from one germ cell phenotype to the next. Here, we report that testicular germ cells express TSPO from neonatal to adult phases, although at lower levels than Leydig cells. TSPO mRNA and protein were found at specific steps of germ cell development. In fetal and neonatal gonocytes, the precursors of SSCs, TSPO appears to be mainly nuclear. In the prepubertal testis, TSPO is present in pachytene spermatocytes and dividing spermatogonia. In adult testes, it is found in a stage-dependent manner in pachytene spermatocyte and round spermatid nuclei, and in mitotic spermatogonia. In search of TSPO function, the TSPO drug ligand PK 11195 was added to isolated gonocytes with or without the proliferative factors PDGF and 17β-estradiol, and was found to have no effect on gonocyte proliferation. However, TSPO strong expression in dividing spermatogonia suggests that it might play a role in spermatogonial mitosis. Taken together, these results suggest that TSPO plays a role in specific phases of germ cell development.  相似文献   

5.
Identification, isolation, and in vitro culture of porcine gonocytes   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Gonocytes are primitive germ cells that reside in the seminiferous tubules of neonatal testes and give rise to spermatogonia, thereby initiating spermatogenesis. Due to a lack of specific markers, the isolation and culture of these cells has proven to be difficult in the pig. In the present study, we show that a lectin, Dolichos biflorus agglutinin (DBA), which has specific affinity for primordial germ cells (PCGs) in the genital ridge, binds specifically to gonocytes in neonatal pig testes. The specific affinity of DBA for germ cells was progressively lost with age. This suggests that DBA binds strongly to primitive germ cells, such as gonocytes, weakly to primitive spermatogonia, and not at all to spermatogonia. The presence of alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity in the germ cells of neonatal pig testis confirmed the existence of primitive germ cells. Gonocytes from neonatal pig testis were purified, and a cell population that consisted of approximately 70% gonocytes was obtained, as indicated by the DBA binding assay. Purified gonocytes were cultured in DMEM/F12 supplemented with 10% FBS in the absence of any specific growth factors for 7 days. The cells remained viable and proliferated actively in culture. Initially, the gonocytes grew as focal colonies that transformed to three-dimensional colonies by 7 days of culture. Cultured germ cells expressed SSEA-1, a marker for embryonic stem (ES) cells, and were negative for the expression of somatic cell markers. These results should help to establish a male germ cell line that could be used for studying spermatogenesis in vitro and for genetic modification of pigs.  相似文献   

6.
Spermatogenesis is a complex process that originates in a small population of spermatogonial stem cells. Here we report the in vitro culture of spermatogonial stem cells that proliferate for long periods of time. In the presence of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor, epidermal growth factor, basic fibroblast growth factor, and leukemia inhibitory factor, gonocytes isolated from neonatal mouse testis proliferated over a 5-month period (>10(14)-fold) and restored fertility to congenitally infertile recipient mice following transplantation into seminiferous tubules. Long-term spermatogonial stem cell culture will be useful for studying spermatogenesis mechanism and has important implications for developing new technology in transgenesis or medicine.  相似文献   

7.
Mammalian spermatogenesis originates from spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs), which undergo mitosis, meiosis and spermiogenesis in order to generate mature spermatozoa. SSCs are adult stem cells that can both self‐renew and differentiate. To maintain pluripotency, SSCs are regulated by both extrinsic factors secreted from surrounding somatic cells and intrinsic factors including specific gene expression programs. Using fluorescent labeled germ line stem cells, mouse gonocytes and SSCs were purified up to 97% by improved FACS method. Through microarray analyses, global gene expression profiles of gonocytes, SSCs, and differentiated cells were compared. A large number of distinctive genes were found to be enriched in respective cell populations, indicating different functional requirements of each cell type. Functional clustering analyses revealed that while gonocytes and SSCs preferentially express genes implicated in gene expression regulation and epigenetic modifications, differentiated cells including somatic cells are enriched with genes encoding proteins involved in various cellular activities. Further in situ hybridization and RT‐PCR experiments confirmed SSC specific expression of several genes of which functions have not been characterized in SSCs. The comparative gene expression profiling provides a useful resource for gene discovery in relation to SSC regulation and opens new avenues for the study of molecular mechanisms underlying SSC self‐renewal and differentiation. genesis 51:83–96, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
10.
Asymmetric division of germline stem cells in vertebrates was proposed a century ago; however, direct evidence for asymmetric division of mammalian spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) has been scarce. Here, we report that ubiquitin carboxy‐terminal hydrolase 1 (UCH‐L1) is expressed in type A (As, Apr, and Aal) spermatogonia located at the basement membrane (BM) of seminiferous tubules at high and low levels, but not in differentiated germ cells distant from the BM. Asymmetric segregation of UCH‐L1 was associated with self‐renewal versus differentiation divisions of SSCs as defined by co‐localization of UCH‐L1high and PLZF, a known determinant of undifferentiated SSCs, versus co‐localization of UCH‐L1low/? with proteins expressed during SSC differentiation (DAZL, DDX4, c‐KIT). In vitro, gonocytes/spermatogonia frequently underwent asymmetric divisions characterized by unequal segregation of UCH‐L1 and PLZF. Importantly, we could also demonstrate asymmetric segregation of UCH‐L1 and PLZF in situ in seminiferous tubules. Expression level of UCH‐L1 in the immature testis where spermatogenesis was not complete was not affected by the location of germ cells relative to the BM, whereas UCH‐L1‐positive spermatogonia were exclusively located at the BM in the adult testis. Asymmetric division of SSCs appeared to be affected by interaction with supporting somatic cells and extracelluar matrix. These findings for the first time provide direct evidence for existence of asymmetric division during SSCs self‐renewal and differentiation in mammalian spermatogenesis. J. Cell. Physiol. 220: 460–468, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Using immunohistochemistry, the expression of the D-type cyclin proteins was studied in the developing and adult mouse testis. Both during testicular development and in adult testis, cyclin D(1) is expressed only in proliferating gonocytes and spermatogonia, indicating a role for cyclin D(1) in spermatogonial proliferation, in particular during the G(1)/S phase transition. Cyclin D(2) is first expressed at the start of spermatogenesis when gonocytes produce A(1) spermatogonia. In the adult testis, cyclin D(2) is expressed in spermatogonia around stage VIII of the seminiferous epithelium when A(al) spermatogonia differentiate into A(1) spermatogonia and also in spermatocytes and spermatids. To further elucidate the role of cyclin D(2) during spermatogenesis, cyclin D(2) expression was studied in vitamin A-deficient testis. Cyclin D(2) was not expressed in the undifferentiated A spermatogonia in vitamin A-deficient testis but was strongly induced in these cells after the induction of differentiation of most of these cells into A(1) spermatogonia by administration of retinoic acid. Overall, cyclin D(2) seems to play a role at the crucial differentiation step of undifferentiated spermatogonia into A(1) spermatogonia. Cyclin D(3) is expressed in both proliferating and quiescent gonocytes during testis development. Cyclin D(3) expression was found in terminally differentiated Sertoli cells, in Leydig cells, and in spermatogonia in adult testis. Hence, although cyclin D(3) may control G(1)/S transition in spermatogonia, it probably has a different role in Sertoli and Leydig cells. In conclusion, the three D-type cyclins are differentially expressed during spermatogenesis. In spermatogonia, cyclins D(1) and D(3) seem to be involved in cell cycle regulation, whereas cyclin D(2) likely has a role in spermatogonial differentiation.  相似文献   

12.
Germ cell transplantation was developed by Dr. Ralph Brinster and colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania in 19941,2. These ground-breaking studies showed that microinjection of germ cells from fertile donor mice into the seminiferous tubules of infertile recipient mice results in donor-derived spermatogenesis and sperm production by the recipient animal2. The use of donor males carrying the bacterial β-galactosidase gene allowed identification of donor-derived spermatogenesis and transmission of the donor haplotype to the offspring by recipient animals1. Surprisingly, after transplantation into the lumen of the seminiferous tubules, transplanted germ cells were able to move from the luminal compartment to the basement membrane where spermatogonia are located3. It is generally accepted that only SSCs are able to colonize the niche and re-establish spermatogenesis in the recipient testis. Therefore, germ cell transplantation provides a functional approach to study the stem cell niche in the testis and to characterize putative spermatogonial stem cells. To date, germ cell transplantation is used to elucidate basic stem cell biology, to produce transgenic animals through genetic manipulation of germ cells prior to transplantation4,5, to study Sertoli cell-germ cell interaction6,7, SSC homing and colonization3,8, as well as SSC self-renewal and differentiation9,10.Germ cell transplantation is also feasible in large species11. In these, the main applications are preservation of fertility, dissemination of elite genetics in animal populations, and generation of transgenic animals as the study of spermatogenesis and SSC biology with this technique is logistically more difficult and expensive than in rodents. Transplantation of germ cells from large species into the seminiferous tubules of mice results in colonization of donor cells and spermatogonial expansion, but not in their full differentiation presumably due to incompatibility of the recipient somatic cell compartment with the germ cells from phylogenetically distant species12. An alternative approach is transplantation of germ cells from large species together with their surrounding somatic compartment. We first reported in 2002, that small fragments of testis tissue from immature males transplanted under the dorsal skin of immunodeficient mice are able to survive and undergo full development with the production of fertilization competent sperm13. Since then testis tissue xenografting has been shown to be successful in many species and emerged as a valuable alternative to study testis development and spermatogenesis of large animals in mice14.  相似文献   

13.
The development of rete testis in the rat, rabbit and guinea pig foetuses has been studied, as well as the influence of prolactin and thyrotropin on differentiation of its cells. It was shown that the rete testis tubules, as well as the seminiferous tubules develop from sex cords, which were derived from coelomic epithelium cells and gonocytes. The development of seminiferous tubules and rete testis was described at various stages of prenatal ontogenesis. Thyrotropin and prolactin exert different effects on differentiation of the rete testis cells: the former increases the mitotic activity of gonocytes and the latter increases that of epithelial cells and enhances degenerative processes in primary germ cells.  相似文献   

14.
Testis cell transplantation from mice or rats into recipient mouse seminiferous tubules results in donor cell-derived spermatogenesis in nearly all host testes. Normal spermatozoa are produced and, in the most successful mouse transplantations, the donor haplotype is transmitted to progeny of the recipient. However, few studies have been performed in other species. In this report, we demonstrate that rat and mouse testis cells will generate donor cell-derived spermatogenesis in recipient rat seminiferous tubules. Depletion of endogenous spermatogenesis before donor cell transplantation was more difficult in rat than reported for mouse recipients. A protocol employing treatment of neonatal rats with busulfan was most effective in preparing recipients and allowed more than 90% of testes to be colonized by donor cells. Transplantation of mouse testis cells into rat seminiferous tubules was most successful in recipients made cryptorchid and treated with busulfan. In the best experiments, about 55% of rat testes were colonized by mouse cells. Both rat and mouse donor cell-derived spermatogenesis were improved by treatment of rat recipients with leuprolide, a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist. The studies indicated that recipient preparation for spermatogonial stem cell transplantation was critical in the rat and differs from the mouse. However, modification of currently used techniques should allow male germ line stem cell transplantation in many species.  相似文献   

15.
Mammalian spermatogenesis is maintained by a continuous supply of differentiating cells from self-renewing stem cells. The stem cell activity resides in a small subset of primitive germ cells, the undifferentiated spermatogonia. However, the relationship between the establishment of this population and the initiation of differentiation in the developing testes remains unclear. In this study, we have investigated this issue by using the unique expression of Ngn3, which is expressed specifically in the undifferentiated spermatogonia, but not in the differentiating spermatogonia or their progenitors, the gonocytes. Our lineage analyses demonstrate that the first round of mouse spermatogenesis initiates directly from gonocytes, without passing through the Ngn3-expressing stage (Ngn3- lineage). By contrast, the subsequent rounds of spermatogenesis are derived from Ngn3-positive undifferentiated spermatogonia, which are also immediate descendents of the gonocytes and represent the stem cell function (Ngn3+ lineage). Thus, in mouse spermatogenesis, the state of the undifferentiated spermatogonia is not an inevitable step but is a developmental option that ensures continuous sperm production. In addition, the segregation of gonocytes into undifferentiated spermatogonia (Ngn3+ lineage) or differentiating spermatogonia (Ngn3- lineage) is topographically related to the establishment of the seminiferous epithelial cycle, thus suggesting a role of somatic components in the establishment of stem cells.  相似文献   

16.
《Reproductive biology》2020,20(3):321-332
The erythropoietin-producing hepatocellular receptor B (EphB) class and ephrin-B ligand have been implicated in boundary formation in various epithelia. We recently found that ephrin-B1 and EphB2/EphB4 exhibit complementary expression in the epithelia along the excurrent duct system in the adult mouse testis. Moreover, the organisation and integrity of the duct system is indispensable for the transport of spermatozoa. Here, we examined ephrin-B1, EphB2 and EphB4 expression in the mouse testis during postnatal development. RT-PCR analysis revealed that the relative expression levels of these molecules decreased with age in early postnatal development, and were similar to those of adults by four weeks of age. Furthermore, immunostaining revealed that the excurrent duct system compartments exhibiting complementary expression of ephrin-B1 and EphB2/EphB4 were formed by two weeks of age. Meanwhile, ephrin-B1 and EphB4 were effective markers for spermatogonia in the neonatal testis due to their negative expression in gonocytes. Alternatively, EphB2 was a suitable marker for assessing completion of the first wave of spermatogenesis in puberty, due to its strong expression in the elongated spermatids of seminiferous tubules. Lastly, ephrin-B1 and EphB4 proved to be markers of both foetal and adult Leydig cells during postnatal development, as they were expressed in CYP17A1-positive cells. This study is the first to investigate the expression of ephrin-B1, EphB2, and EphB4 in normal mouse testes during postnatal development. The expression patterns of ephrin-B and EphBs may represent suitable tools for examining organisation of the excurrent duct system and monitoring reproductive toxicity during postnatal development.  相似文献   

17.
18.
I Rodriguez  C Ody  K Araki  I Garcia    P Vassalli 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(9):2262-2270
Transgenic mice expressing high levels of the BclxL or Bcl2 proteins in the male germinal cells show a highly abnormal adult spermatogenesis accompanied by sterility. This appears to result from the prevention of an early and massive wave of apoptosis in the testis, which occurs among germinal cells during the first round of spermatogenesis. In contrast, sporadic apoptosis among spermatogonia, which occurs in normal adult testis, is not prevented in adult transgenic mice. The physiological early apoptotic wave in the testis is coincident, in timing and localization, with a temporary high expression of the apoptosis-promoting protein Bax, which disappears at sexual maturity. The critical role played by the intracellular balance, probably hormonally controlled, of the BclxL and Bax proteins (Bcl2 is apparently not expressed in normal mouse testis) in this early apoptotic wave is shown by the occurrence of a comparable testicular syndrome in mice defective in the bax gene. The apoptotic wave appears necessary for normal mature spermatogenesis to develop, probably because it maintains a critical cell number ratio between some germinal cell stages and Sertoli cells, whose normal functions and differentiation involve an elaborate network of communication.  相似文献   

19.
Cell fate determination between self-renewal or differentiation of spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) in the testis is precisely regulated to maintain normal spermatogenesis. However, the mechanisms underlying the process remain elusive. To address the problem, we developed a model SSC culture system, first, by establishing techniques to obtain enriched populations of stem cells, and second, by establishing a serum-free culture medium. Flow cytometric cell sorting and the SSC transplantation assay demonstrated that Thy-1 is a unique surface marker of SSCs in neonatal, pup, and adult testes of the mouse. Although the surface phenotype of SSCs is major histocompatibility complex class I(-) Thy-1(+) alpha 6-integrin(+) alpha v-integrin(-/dim) throughout postnatal life, the most enriched population of SSCs was obtained from cryptorchid adult testes by cell-sorting techniques based on Thy-1 expression. This enriched population of SSCs was used to develop a culture system that consisted of serum-free defined medium and STO (SIM mouse embryo-derived thioguanine and ouabain resistant) feeders, which routinely maintained stem cell activity for 1 wk. Combining the culture system and the transplantation assay provided a mechanism to study the effect of single growth factors. A negative effect was demonstrated for several concentrations of basic fibroblast growth factor and leukemia inhibitory factor, whereas glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor and stem cell factor appeared to have a positive effect on stem cell maintenance. The stem cell enrichment strategies and the culture methods described provide a reproducible and powerful assay system to establish the effect of various environmental factors on SSC survival and replication in vitro.  相似文献   

20.
During testis development, proliferation and death of gonocytes are highly regulated to establish a standard population of adult stem spermatogonia that maintain normal spermatogenesis. As Transforming Growth Factor beta (TGFbeta) can regulate proliferation and apoptosis, we investigated its expression and functions during testis development. We show that TGFbeta2 is only expressed in quiescent gonocytes and decreases gonocyte proliferation in vitro. To study the functions of TGFbeta2, we developed conditional mice that invalidate the TGFbeta receptor type II in germ cells. Most of the knock-out animals die during fetal life, but the surviving adults show a reduced pool of spermatogonial stem/progenitor cells and become sterile with time. Using an organ culture system mimicking in vivo development, we show higher proportions of proliferating and apoptotic gonocytes from 13.5 dpc until 1 dpp, suggesting a reduction of germinal quiescence in these animals. Conversely, a 24-hour TGFbeta2-treatment of explanted wild-type testes, isolated every day from 13.5 dpc until 1 dpp, increased the duration of quiescence.These data show that the TGFbeta signaling pathway plays a physiological role during testis development by acting directly as a negative regulator of the fetal and neonatal germ cell proliferation, and indicate that the TGFbeta signaling pathway might regulate the duration of germ cell quiescence and is necessary to maintain adult spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

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