首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 203 毫秒
1.
The distribution of XX and XY cells in XX----XY chimaeric mouse testes was analysed by enzyme marker analysis of separated testicular tissues and by in situ DNA marker analysis of air-dried testicular cells and testis sections. XX cells contributed to the Leydig cells, the peritubular cells and the vascularized connective tissue of the tunica albuginea. The Sertoli cells, on the other hand, appeared to be exclusively XY. These results indicate that during the development of the testis, Sertoli cell differentiation is triggered by cell-autonomous activity of the Y chromosomal testis-determining gene Tdy. Subsequent steps in testis differentiation may be a consequence of Sertoli cell activity.  相似文献   

2.
Oocytes with adhering follicle cells were sampled from ovaries obtained from 11 GPI-1A----GPI-1B chimaeras, comprising 10 females and 1 hermaphrodite. GPI analysis of individual oocytes revealed a marked bias towards the GPI-1B component in the germ line of this chimaeric combination. GPI-1B XY oocytes were identified in the ovary from the hermaphrodite, the bias towards the GPI-1B germ line perhaps helping to counterbalance the normally severe selection against XY oocytes. GPI analysis of follicle cells revealed a much more balanced contribution of the two components to this ovarian cell type. Importantly, GPI-1A follicle cells were identified in more than half the follicles from an XX----XY female in which the GPI-1A component was XY, supporting an earlier conclusion of Ford et al. (1974) that XY cells can contribute to the follicles of XX----XY female mice. It is suggested that XY cells can be recruited to form follicle cells in XX----XY chimaeras when there is a developmental mismatch between the two components, such that an ovary-determining signal produced by the XX component pre-empts the testis-determining action of the Y.  相似文献   

3.
Role of mammalian Y chromosome in sex determination   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
It has long been assumed that the mammalian Y chromosome either encodes, or controls the production of, a diffusible testis-determining molecule, exposure of the embryonic gonad to this molecule being all that is required to divert it along the testicular pathway. My recent finding that Sertoli cells in XX----XY chimeric mouse testes are exclusively XY has led me to propose a new model in which the Y acts cell-autonomously to bring about Sertoli-cell differentiation. I have suggested that all other aspects of foetal testicular development are triggered by the Sertoli cells without further Y-chromosome involvement. This model thus equates mammalian sex determination with Sertoli-cell determination. Examples of natural and experimentally induced sex reversal are discussed in the context of this model.  相似文献   

4.
The sex-determining region of Chr Y (Sry) gene is sufficient to induce testis formation and the subsequent male development of internal and external genitalia in chromosomally female mice and humans. In XX sex-reversed males, such as XX/Sry-transgenic (XX/Sry) mice, however, testicular germ cells always disappear soon after birth because of germ cell-autonomous defects. Therefore, it remains unclear whether or not Sry alone is sufficient to induce a fully functional testicular soma capable of supporting complete spermatogenesis in the XX body. Here, we demonstrate that the testicular somatic environment of XX/Sry males is defective in supporting the later phases of spermatogenesis. Spermatogonial transplantation analyses using XX/Sry male mice revealed that donor XY spermatogonia are capable of proliferating, of entering meiosis and of differentiating to the round-spermatid stage. XY-donor-derived round spermatids, however, were frequently detached from the XX/Sry seminiferous epithelia and underwent cell death, resulting in severe deficiency of elongated spermatid stages. By contrast, immature XY seminiferous tubule segments transplanted under XX/Sry testis capsules clearly displayed proper differentiation into elongated spermatids in the transplanted XY-donor tubules. Microarray analysis of seminiferous tubules isolated from XX/Sry testes confirmed the missing expression of several Y-linked genes and the alterations in the expression profile of genes associated with spermiogenesis. Therefore, our findings indicate dysfunction of the somatic tubule components, probably Sertoli cells, of XX/Sry testes, highlighting the idea that Sry alone is insufficient to induce a fully functional Sertoli cell in XX mice.  相似文献   

5.
In order to investigate the function of gonadal somatic cells in the sex differentiation of germ cells, we produced chimera fish containing both male (XY) and female (XX) cells by means of cell transplantation between blastula embryos in the medaka, Oryzias latipes. Sexually mature chimera fish were obtained from all combinations of recipient and donor genotypes. Most chimeras developed according to the genetic sex of the recipients, whose cells are thought to be dominant in the gonads of chimeras. However, among XX/XY (recipient/donor) chimeras, we obtained three males that differentiated into the donor's sex. Genotyping of their progeny and of strain-specific DNA fragments in their testes showed that, although two of them produced progeny from only XX spermatogenic cells, their testes all contained XY cells. That is, in the two XX/XY chimeras, germ cells consisted of XX cells but testicular somatic cells contained both XX and XY cells, suggesting that the XY somatic cells induced sex reversal of the XX germ cells and the XX somatic cells. The histological examination of developing gonads of XX/XY chimera fry showed that XY donor cells affect the early sex differentiation of germ cells. These results suggest that XY somatic cells start to differentiate into male cells depending on their sex chromosome composition, and that, in the environment produced by XY somatic cells in the medaka, germ cells differentiate into male cells regardless of their sex chromosome composition.  相似文献   

6.
The specific activity of G6PD and PGK were measured in the testes, seminal vesicles, and livers of Sxr/+,XX mice, their Sxr/+,XY littermates and normal mice. While G6PD activity was high in the testes of young normal mice and declined as the testes matured, in the testes of Sxr/+,XX mice activity remained high, suggesting a failure of the Sertoli cells to mature normally. The activity of PGK was low in the testes of young normal mice, and increased as the testes matured. The testes of young Sxr/+,XX mice had high activity of this enzyme which remained high into adulthood. The high activity in young mice suggests an abnormality in the somatic cells. The seminal vesicle and liver measurements of G6PD and PGK confirmed that the Sxr/+,XX mice were phenotypically normal males except with respect to the testis. The developmental patterns of both enzymes in testes lacking germinal cells indicate that the maturation of the somatic cells of the normal testis is influenced by the presence of germinal cells.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Summary On the basis of widespread phylogenetic conservatism, it has been propose'd that serologically-defined H-Y antigen is the inducer of primary sex differentiation in mammals, causing the initially indifferent gonad to become a testis rather than an ovary. The proposal has withstood extensive testing in a variety of biological circumstances: XX males have testes and are H-Y+ and fertile XY females lack testicular tissue and are H-Y; soluble H-Y antigen induces testicular organogenesis in XX indifferent gonads of the fetal calf in culture; H-Y antibody blocks tubular reaggregation of dispersed XY testicular cells, causing them to organize follicular clusters.There is a gonadal receptor for H-Y antigen: fetal ovarian cells that have been exposed to soluble H-Y (released for example by testicular Sertoli cells) take up the molecule and acquire the H-Y+ phenotype; they absorb H-Y antibody in serological tests. Specific uptake of soluble H-Y does not occur in the extra-gonadal tissues.It may be inferred that H-Y antigen is disseminated during embryogenesis and bound by specific receptors in cells of the primordial gonad, and that reaction of H-Y and its receptor signals a program of testicular differentiation, regardless of karyotype. The several anomalies of primary sexual differentiation manifest in such conditions as the XX male, the XX true hermaphrodite, and the XY female can thus reasonably be viewed as specific errors of synthesis, dissemination, and binding of H-Y antigen.H-Y is secreted by Daudi cells, cultured from a human XY Burkitt lymphoma. The Daudi-secreted moiety is a single hydrophobic protein of 18,000 molecular weight. Early attempts to characterize H-Y secreted by testicular Sertoli cells have yielded two molecules, one of 16,500 MW (corresponding to the Daudi-secreted 18,000 MW protein), and one of 31,000 MW. It remains to be ascertained whether both are in fact H-Y antigens, and if so, whether one is a polymer of the other, or whether each represents the product of genes with discrete testis-determining functions.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Sry (sex-determining region on Y chromosome) is expressed in the undifferentiated, bipotential genital ridges of mammalian XY fetuses. The expression of Sry initiates testis development, but the lineage of Sry-expressing cells is unclear. In this study, double-transgenic mice were analyzed using the Cre/loxP system. Cre under the control of the Sry promoter was expressed in the fetal gonads of transgenic mice similarly to endogenous Sry. The Sry/Cre-transgenic mice were crossed with CAG(cytomegalovirus immediate-early enhancer, chicken beta-actin promoter and fusion intron of chicken beta-actin and rabbit beta-globin)/loxP/CAT/loxP/LacZ-transgenic mice, in which the transgene expressed beta-galactosidase after a Cre-mediated recombination event. Sertoli cells, germ cells of testes and granulosa cells of ovaries of double-transgenic mice stained positive with X-gal. Cre expression was detected in germ cells and peritubular/Sertoli cells in adult testes. It is not clear whether beta-galactosidase expression in the Sertoli cells of the testes occurred as a result of Cre expression in the adult or in the fetal gonads. These analyses indicate that cells expressing Sry-inducing factors in female fetal gonads become granulosa cells.  相似文献   

11.
In mammals, early fetal germ cells are unique in their ability to initiate the spermatogenesis or oogenesis programs dependent of their somatic environment. In mice, female germ cells enter into meiosis at 13.5 dpc whereas in the male, germ cells undergo mitotic arrest. Recent findings indicate that Cyp26b1, a RA-degrading enzyme, is a key factor preventing initiation of meiosis in the fetal testis. Here, we report evidence for additional testicular pathways involved in the prevention of fetal meiosis. Using a co-culture model in which an undifferentiated XX gonad is cultured with a fetal or neonatal testis, we demonstrated that the testis prevented the initiation of meiosis and induced male germ cell differentiation in the XX gonad. This testicular effect disappeared when male meiosis starts in the neonatal testis and was not directly due to Cyp26b1 expression. Moreover, neither RA nor ketoconazole, an inhibitor of Cyp26b1, completely prevented testicular inhibition of meiosis in co-cultured ovary. We found that secreted factor(s), with molecular weight greater than 10 kDa contained in conditioned media from cultured fetal testes, inhibited meiosis in the XX gonad. Lastly, although both Sertoli and interstitial cells inhibited meiosis in XX germ cells, only interstitial cells induced mitotic arrest in germ cell. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that male germ cell determination is supported by additional non-retinoid secreted factors inhibiting both meiosis and mitosis and produced by the testicular somatic cells during fetal and neonatal life.  相似文献   

12.
One of the earliest morphological changes during testicular differentiation is the establishment of an XY specific vasculature. The testis vascular system is derived from mesonephric endothelial cells that migrate into the gonad. In the XX gonad, mesonephric cell migration and testis vascular development are inhibited by WNT4 signaling. In Wnt4 mutant XX gonads, endothelial cells migrate from the mesonephros and form a male-like coelomic vessel. Interestingly, this process occurs in the absence of other obvious features of testis differentiation, suggesting that Wnt4 specifically inhibits XY vascular development. Consequently, the XX Wnt4 mutant mice presented an opportunity to focus a gene expression screen on the processes of mesonephric cell migration and testicular vascular development. We compared differences in gene expression between XY Wnt4+/+ and XX Wnt4+/+ gonads and between XX Wnt4+/+ and XX Wnt4+/+ gonads to identify sets of genes similarly upregulated in wildtype XY gonads and XX mutant gonads or upregulated in XX gonads as compared to XY gonads and XX mutant gonads. We show that several genes identified in the first set are expressed in vascular domains, and have predicted functions related to cell migration or vascular development. However, the expression patterns and known functions of other genes are not consistent with roles in these processes. This screen has identified candidates for regulation of sex specific vascular development, and has implicated a role for WNT4 signaling in the development of Sertoli and germ cell lineages not immediately obvious from previous phenotypic analyses.  相似文献   

13.
One of the earliest morphological changes during testicular differentiation is the establishment of an XY specific vasculature. The testis vascular system is derived from mesonephric endothelial cells that migrate into the gonad. In the XX gonad, mesonephric cell migration and testis vascular development are inhibited by WNT4 signaling. In Wnt4 mutant XX gonads, endothelial cells migrate from the mesonephros and form a male-like coelomic vessel. Interestingly, this process occurs in the absence of other obvious features of testis differentiation, suggesting that Wnt4 specifically inhibits XY vascular development. Consequently, the XX Wnt4 mutant mice presented an opportunity to focus a gene expression screen on the processes of mesonephric cell migration and testicular vascular development. We compared differences in gene expression between XY Wnt4+/+ and XX Wnt4+/+ gonads and between XX Wnt4-/- and XX Wnt4+/+ gonads to identify sets of genes similarly upregulated in wildtype XY gonads and XX mutant gonads or upregulated in XX gonads as compared to XY gonads and XX mutant gonads. We show that several genes identified in the first set are expressed in vascular domains, and have predicted functions related to cell migration or vascular development. However, the expression patterns and known functions of other genes are not consistent with roles in these processes. This screen has identified candidates for regulation of sex specific vascular development, and has implicated a role for WNT4 signaling in the development of Sertoli and germ cell lineages not immediately obvious from previous phenotypic analyses.  相似文献   

14.
Sry induces cell proliferation in the mouse gonad   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Sry is the only gene on the Y chromosome that is required for testis formation in mammals. One of the earliest morphological changes that occurs as a result of Sry expression is a size increase of the rudimentary XY gonad relative to the XX gonad. Using 5'-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation to label dividing cells, we found that the size increase corresponds with a dramatic increase in somatic cell proliferation in XY gonads, which is not detected in XX gonads. This male-specific proliferation was observed initially in the cells of the coelomic epithelium and occurred in two distinct stages. During the first stage, proliferation in the XY gonad was observed largely in SF1-positive cells and contributed to the Sertoli cell population. During the second stage, proliferation was observed in SF1-negative cells at and below the coelomic epithelium and did not give rise to Sertoli cells. Both stages of proliferation were dependent on Sry and independent of any other genetic differences between male and female gonads, such as X chromosome dosage or other genes on the Y chromosome. The increase in cell proliferation began less than 24 hours after the onset of Sry expression, before the establishment of male-specific gene expression patterns, and before the appearance of any other known male-specific morphological changes in the XY gonad. Therefore, an increase in cell proliferation in the male coelomic epithelium is the earliest identified effect of Sry expression.  相似文献   

15.
A 35-year-old male was investigated for primary infertility. Clinical examination showed an intelligent man with normal facial appearance and moustache and small firm testes. Testicular histopathology revealed marked atrophy of the testes with no spermatogenesis and absence of germ cells. Hormonal profile showed elevated levels of FSH,LH and low levels of testosterone. Chromosome analysis from whole blood culture showed cells with 46,XX/46,XY/47,XXY/48,XXXY/48,XXYY mosaicism. The predominant cell line was 47,XXY (87.86%). 46,XY/47,XXY mosaicism is not uncommon. However, mosaicism of multiple sex chromosome aneuploidy is rarely observed. This is the first report of mosaicism in Klinefelter's syndrome variant with five cell lines.  相似文献   

16.
Gonadal effects of the Denys-Drash syndrome (DDS) mutation Wt1tmT396 were examined in chimaeric and heterozygous mice. Since the only heterozygote was 41,XXY, Sertoli cell function was assessed by comparison with age-matched control XXY testes. Control XXY Sertoli cells showed immunoexpression of WT1 and androgen receptor (AR) indistinguishable from wild-type (40,XY), but expressed anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH). In contrast, DDS Sertoli cells showed only faint immunoexpression of WT1 and did not express AR or AMH. While XY↔XY DDS chimaeras were male, XX↔XY chimaeras were predominantly female. In the rare XX↔XY DDS males the Sertoli cell lineage was largely derived from Wt1 mutant XY cells. We conclude that DDS mutant cells can form Sertoli cells, that the dominant mutation does not cause male sex reversal in mice but distorts the sex ratio of XX↔XY chimaeras, and that there may be a link between WT1, AMH and AR expression by Sertoli cells in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
To investigate the mechanism of sex determination in the germ line, we analyzed the fate of XY germ cells in ovaries, and the fate of XX germ cells in testes. In ovaries, germ cells developed according to their X:A ratio, i.e., XX cells underwent oogenesis, XY cells formed spermatocytes. In testes, however, XY and XX germ cells entered the spermatogenic pathway. Thus, to determine their sex, the germ cells of Drosophila have cell-autonomous genetic information, and XX cells respond to inductive signals of the soma. Results obtained with amorphic and constitutive mutations of Sxl show that both the genetic and the somatic signals act through Sxl to achieve sex determination in germ cells.  相似文献   

18.
Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) induces regression of Müllerian ducts during male fetal development; in the human male, it is expressed in Sertoli cells during fetal development (and through puberty). The objective was to characterize expression of AMH in the fetal, neonatal, prepubertal, and adult equine testis, as well as in equine cryptorchid testes, in select testicular neoplasms, and in intersex gonads, based upon immunohistochemistry (IHC). Testes were removed from equine fetuses at 5.5, 10, and 11 months of gestation, at 12 months of age, and from adult stallions. In addition, cryptorchid testes, testis tumors (teratomas, seminomas, Sertoli cell tumors), and male intersex gonads were examined by IHC for expression of AMH using a goat polyclonal primary antibody (alpha-AMH) directed against a C-terminal peptide antigen from human AMH. Immunolabeling with alpha-AMH was localized to Sertoli cells within the developing seminiferous tubules of fetal, neonatal and prepubertal equine testes, with no expression detected in Sertoli cells from normal adult equine testes. Furthermore, expression was detected in cryptorchid testes (in animals up to 3-4 years of age) and in Sertoli cell tumors and male intersex gonads. In conclusion, AMH was strongly expressed by Sertoli cells in fetal, neonatal and prepubertal equine testes, but not in normal adult testes. That AMH was expressed in cryptorchid testes may provide a useful biomarker for detection of cryptorchid testes, as well as for immunohistochemical characterization of testicular tumors and intersex gonads in the horse.  相似文献   

19.
The expression of cytokeratin and vimentin type intermediate filaments were studied in fetal, postnatal, and adult rat testes. Immunocytochemical observations were correlated with the light and electron microscopic analysis of the developing organs. The Sertoli cell precursors in 15-day-old fetal testes contained both cytokeratin and vimentin. A gradual reorganization of both filaments, accompanied by a decrease of cytokeratin-positivity, was observed toward the end of the fetal period. The simultaneous presence of cytokeratin and vimentin in the same cells was shown by double immunofluorescence of newborn testes and the primary culture of dissociated testicular cells. In postnatal Sertoli cells, cytokeratin-positivity continued to decrease and disappeared by the age of 14 days. The increase in vimentin content and the appearance of axially oriented vimentin filaments coincided with the acquisition of the columnar shape of the Sertoli cells. The presence of cytokeratin and vimentin in fetal and newborn testes, and only vimentin in the adult testes was confirmed by immunoblotting. The present results suggest that major qualitative changes in the expression of intermediate filament proteins can take place during the embryonic development. The expression of cytokeratin in developing Sertoli cells, although only transient, supports the epithelial origin of these cells and can be applied as a marker for embryonic and early postnatal Sertoli cells.  相似文献   

20.
Retinoic acid (RA) is a meiosis-inducing factor. Primordial germ cells (PGCs) in the developing ovary are exposed to RA, resulting in entry into meiosis. In contrast, PGCs in the developing testis enter mitotic arrest to differentiate into prospermatogonia. Sertoli cells express CYP26B1, an RA-metabolizing enzyme, providing a simple explanation for why XY PGCs do not initiate meios/is. However, regulation of entry into mitotic arrest is likely more complex. To investigate the mechanisms that regulate male germ cell differentiation, we cultured XX and XY germ cells at 11.5 and 12.5 days postcoitus (dpc) with an RA receptor inhibitor. Expression of Stra8, a meiosis initiation gene, was suppressed in all groups. However, expression of Dnmt3l, a male-specific gene, during embryogenesis was elevated but only in 12.5-dpc XY germ cells. This suggests that inhibiting RA signaling is not sufficient for male germ cell differentiation but that the male gonadal environment also contributes to this pathway. To define the influence of Sertoli cells on male germ cell differentiation, Sertoli cells at 12.5, 15.5, and 18.5 dpc were aggregated with 11.5 dpc PGCs, respectively. After culture, PGCs aggregated with 12.5 dpc Sertoli cells increased Nanos2 and Dnmt3l expression. Furthermore, these PGCs established male-specific methylation imprints of the H19 differentially methylated domains. In contrast, PGCs aggregated with Sertoli cells at late embryonic ages did not commit to the male pathway. These findings suggest that male germ cell differentiation is induced both by inhibition of RA signaling and by molecule(s) production by embryonic age-specific Sertoli cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号