A blood-testis barrier restricting passage from blood into rete testis fluid but not into lymph

1. A permeability barrier in or around the seminiferous tubules of rams has been demonstrated by studying the rate of passage of a variety of substances from blood plasma into fluid collected from the rete testis and into testicular lymph. 2. All substances studied passed readily into testicular lym...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of physiology Vol. 200; no. 1; pp. 73 - 85
Main Authors Setchell, B. P., Voglmayr, J. K., Waites, G. M. H.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England The Physiological Society 01.01.1969
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:1. A permeability barrier in or around the seminiferous tubules of rams has been demonstrated by studying the rate of passage of a variety of substances from blood plasma into fluid collected from the rete testis and into testicular lymph. 2. All substances studied passed readily into testicular lymph. 3. Tritiated water, urea, ethanol and bicarbonate in rete testis fluid equilibrated with blood plasma within 3 hr; Na + , K + , Rb + , Cl - , I - , CNS - , creatinine and galactose entered slowly and p -aminohippurate (PAH), glutamate, iodinated albumin, inulin and [ 51 Cr]EDTA did not appear in rete testis fluid at all. 4. Rubidium was excluded relative to iodoantipyrine from the testes of control and hypophysectomized rats and from rat testes heated to 37, 40, 43 and 45° C; no such exclusion was seen in testes of rats which had been given cadmium chloride 5 months earlier so as to destroy the seminiferous tubules. 5. It is suggested that this permeability barrier will regulate the access to the seminiferous epithelium of some constituents of blood plasma, isolate the germinal cells immunologically and help to maintain the concentration differences between rete testis fluid and lymph or blood plasma.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0022-3751
1469-7793
DOI:10.1113/jphysiol.1969.sp008682