The testis and epididymis of gerbil, guinea pig, nutria, and mouse were studied after staining with seven rhodamine-conjugated lectins to disclose the distribution of glycoproteins with different sugar residues. In the testis, the lectins showed a variable affinity for Leydig cells, tubular basement membrane, cytoplasm, acrosome, and plasma membrane of maturing spermatids as well as for Sertoli cell extensions. During acrosomal development, the staining pattern showed characteristic changes with different lectins indicating a gradual processing of the glycoprotein components. The staining in the Sertoli cell extensions displayed a cyclic change linked with the release of spermatozoa. A nuclear staining was prominent in zygotene and pachytene spermatocytes in the mouse, weak in the nutria, but absent in gerbil and guinea pig. The principal cells of epididymis showed a lectin-stained Golgi region as well as a similar staining in the apical surface, microvilli, and tubular contents. This staining was most prominent in the caput/corpus regions with some interspecies differences indicating the epididymal areas active in secretion. Narrow cells active in absorption of testis-derived material were lectin-positive in the initial segment of mouse, gerbil, and nutria epididymis. Large light cells with a strong affinity for some lectins were found in the proximal cauda of gerbil and guinea-pig epididymis. In the nutria, corresponding cells were arranged as islands within the low epithelium. The distal cauda of mouse, gerbil, and nutria was the site for lectin-stained light cells interspersed among the low principal cells. It is concluded that the high and low light cells may be active in the absorption and phagocytosis of residual bodies/cytoplasmic droplets and surplus epididymal secretory material, respectively. Thus, labeled lectins formed a useful tool in the analysis of glycoprotein distribution, processing, secretion, absorption, and degradation in the male reproductive tissues.
Seven rhodamine-conjugated lectins (PNA, RCA I, SBA, Con A, WGA, UEA I, DBA) were used to study the distribution of glycoproteins in the testis and epididymis of immature, juvenile, and adult bulls. A marked change was found in the staining pattern of the lectins in the seminiferous tubules during acrosomal development, and the Sertoli cells seemed to have a cyclic affinity for some of the lectins. The distribution of lectin staining in six regions of the bull epididymis showed some typical differences that were associated with the secretory and absorptive functions of the organ. Region 1 was characterized by strong surface and villous staining and a patchy reaction in the principal cells. Regions 2 and 3 showed a strongly reactive apical Golgi zone and secretory material. In regions 4 and 5, the Golgi zone was subapical but strongly reactive with most lectins, while in region 6 a weakly reactive apical Golgi zone was found. During sexual maturation, an increasing number of basal cells with a strong affinity for some lectins was found at the periphery of the epithelium in regions 2 to 6. These regions also had lectin-stained material along the basal border of the principal cells. These findings suggest that the basal cells may be active in the digestion of absorbed material and that they derive from the principal cells, which may be active in transporting absorbed material to them. The staining pattern of the spermatozoa changed during their transit through the epididymis. The degenerating cells in the testis and epididymal tubules also showed an altered affinity for the lectins.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.