“…TGF- exerts its biological effects by first binding to the TGF- type II receptor (TRII), which then recruits the type I receptor (TRI), forming a TGF-/TRII/TRI complex, except that TGF-2 binds to the two receptors almost at the same time with the assistance of the type III receptor, -glycan (Massagué, 2000;Massagué and Gomis, 2006). This protein complex, in turn, recruits other adaptors, mediating different signaling pathways downstream, involving different GTPases and mitogenactivated protein kinases (MAPKs), and regulating an array of cellular events and functions under normal and pathological conditions, including spermatogenesis (Lui et al, 2003a;Xia et al, 2005a;Loveland et al, 2007;Massagué, 2008;Worthington et al, 2011). For instance, TGF- signaling downstream involving either p38 MAPK (Lui et al, 2003c;Wong et al, 2004) or ERK1/2 can disrupt either BTB and germ cell adhesion or BTB function only, respectively.…”