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Selective partitioning of plasma membrane antigens during mouse spermatogenesis
Authors:Clarke F Millette  Anthony R Bellvé
Institution:Department of Physiology and Laboratory of Human Reproduction and Reproductive Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 USA
Abstract:The selective partitioning of cell membrane components during mouse spermatogenesis has been examined using a heterologous antibody raised against isolated type B spermatogonia. The anti-type B spermatogonia rabbit IgG (ATBS) binds to isolated populations of mouse primitive type A spermatogonia, type A spermatogonia, type B spermatogonia, preleptotene spermatocytes, leptotene/zygotene spermatocytes, pachytene spermatocytes, round spermatids, residual bodies, and mature spermatozoa. Although immunofluorescent labeling is uniformly distributed on the cell surface of early spermatogenic cells, a discrete topographical localization of IgG is observed on testicular, epididymal, and vas deferens spermatozoa. The convex surface of the acrosome, postacrosomal region, and tail are labeled. Antibody does not bind to a broad area corresponding to the concave region of the acrosome. The antibody also binds to mouse somatic cells including Sertoli cells, Leydig cells, thymocytes, and splenocytes, but not to mature spermatozoa of the vole, rat, hamster, guinea pig, rabbit, or human. ATBS, after absorption with mouse splenocytes or thymocytes, does not react with any somatic cells examined by fluorescence except with Sertoli cells. In addition, all reactivity with testicular, epididymal, and was deferens spermatozoa is abolished. However, spermatogenic cells at earlier stages of differentiation, including residual bodies, still react strongly with the absorbed antibody. The number of surface receptor sites per cell for absorbed ATBS ranges from approximately 3 million on primitive type A spermatogonia to 1 million on round spermatids and on residual bodies. Spermatozoa, however, have only 0.003 million binding sites for absorbed ATBS, in contrast to 10 million sites for the unabsorbed antibody. It appears that receptor sites for absorbed ATBS are not masked by components of epididymal secretions. These data imply, therefore, that specific mechanisms operate at the level of the cell membrane during spermiogenesis to insure that some surface components, not required in the mature spermatozoon, are removed selectively by partitioning to that portion of the spermatid membrane destined for the residual body.
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