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Immunolocalization of a 25-kilodalton protein in mouse testis and epididymis.
Authors:M E Vierula  Y Araki  T L Rankin  D R Tulsiani  M C Orgebin-Crist
Institution:Center for Reproductive Biology Research, Vanderbilt School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-2633.
Abstract:We have recently observed that a polyclonal antibody raised against a mouse epididymal luminal fluid protein (MEP 9) recognizes a 25-kDa antigen in mouse testis and epididymis Rankin et al., Biol Reprod 1992; 46:747-766]. This antigen was localized by light and electron microscopic immunohistochemistry. The immunoreactivity in the testis was found in the residual cytoplasm of the elongated spermatids, in the residual bodies, and in the cytoplasmic droplets of spermatozoa. In the epididymis, the epithelial principal cells were stained from the distal caput to the distal cauda. Immunogold labeling in the principal cells showed diffuse distribution without preferential accumulation in either the endocytic or the secretory apparatus of the cells. In the epididymal lumen, the immunoreactivity was restricted to the sperm cytoplasmic droplets. No membrane-specific labeling was observed in luminal spermatozoa, cytoplasmic droplets, or isolated sperm plasma membranes. Three weeks after hemicastration or severance of the efferent ducts, a normal distribution of the immunoreactive sites was found in the epididymis. Immunoreactivity, was also detected in the epididymal epithelium of immature mice as well as in that of XXSxr male mice having no spermatozoa in the epididymis. These results suggest that the immunoreactivity seen in the principal cells originates from synthesis rather than endocytosis of the testicular protein from disrupted cytoplasmic droplets. Furthermore, these results suggest that the 25-kDa protein is synthesized independently by both testis and epididymis.
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