In mouse testes, Sertoli cells support the continuous process of spermatogenesis, which is dependent on seminiferous epithelial cycles along the longitudinal axis of the seminiferous tubule. Sertoli cell function is modulated partly by local cytokines and/or growth factors derived from adjacent tissues such as blood vessels, macrophages, rete testis, etc. However, the spatial activation patterns by local signals in vivo remain unclear. In this study, we focused on Signal Transducers and Activators of Transcription (STAT) signaling in Sertoli cells, because STAT is a major crucial cytokine transducer for somatic cyst cell regulation in Drosophila testis niches. In mouse testes, STAT3 was ubiquitously expressed in Sertoli cells throughout the seminiferous tubules. Phosphorylated STAT3 (p-STAT3) was predominantly observed in the Sertoli cells within the valve-like structure adjacent to the rete testis (i.e., the Sertoli valve [SV]) in the terminal segment of the proximal seminiferous tubules. In the distal seminiferous tubules with active spermatogenesis, most Sertoli cells were negative for anti-p-STAT3 staining. Albeit rarely, a small patch of several p-STAT3-positive Sertoli cells was detected frequently in seminiferous epithelial cycle stages I-VI. Such p-STAT3-positive ratios in the convoluted seminiferous epithelia were significantly increased in germ cell-less testes than in the wild-type testes, but with considerably lower ratios than in the SV region. These findings imply that regionally distinct patterns of STAT3 phosphorylation in the Sertoli cells depend on either location or spermatogenic activity in normal healthy testes in vivo, highlighting a novel entry point to understanding STAT signaling in mammalian spermatogenesis.
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