Abstract: | Controlled perfusion through the lumen of the distal cauda epididymidis in the anaesthetized rat has been explored as a means of examining physiological exchanges from blood across the epididymal epithelium. The mean length of the perfused, sperm-free, tubule was 14.5 cm (+/- 1.5 s.e.m., n = 9). No cholesterol, protein or sialic acid was detected in the perfusate at flow rates exceeding 10 microliters/min, but at rates of 0.4--1.2 microliters/min, protein appeared at concentrations of 0.21--0.55 mg/ml (i.e. secretion rates of 0.21--0.83 micrograms/min; 3 rats). Glucose was detected at all perfusion rates (3--27 microliters/min) at concentrations of 0.06--0.58 mM (0.8--6.8% blood levels). During intravenous infusions of 3H2O, radioactivity in the perfusate rapidly attained 87% blood plasma concentrations; no radioactivity was detected when carboxy-E114C]dextran or methoxy-[3H]inulin were infused. Radioactivity appeared in the epididymal perfusate to 1--7% of blood levels during intravenous infusions of D-E1U-1RC]glucose or 3-O-methyl[1-3H]glucose. This evidence suggests that the preparation is physiological and could be used to explore the dynamics of exchanges between blood and epididymis. |