Cellular Immunolocalization of Occludin during Embryonic and Postnatal Development of the Mouse Testis and Epididymis1
Cellular junctions in the testis and epididymis play crucial roles for the development and maturation of spermatozoa. In the testis, tight junctions between Sertoli cells form a functional blood testis barrier between 10 and 16 days of age, whereas the tight junctional blood epididymal barrier betwe...
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Published in | Endocrinology (Philadelphia) Vol. 140; no. 8; pp. 3815 - 3825 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Endocrine Society
01.08.1999
|
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Cellular junctions in the testis and epididymis play crucial roles for
the development and maturation of spermatozoa. In the testis, tight
junctions between Sertoli cells form a functional blood testis barrier
between 10 and 16 days of age, whereas the tight junctional blood
epididymal barrier between adjacent epithelial cells is formed between
days 18 and 21. In the present study, occludin, a constituent integral
membrane protein of tight junctions, was localized by immunofluorescent
confocal microscopy in embryonic (days 13.5–18.5), postnatal (days
5–23) and adult (day 70) mouse testes and epididymides to correlate
its expression with the onset of tight junctions and eventual formation
of these barriers. At embryonic days 13.5 and 16.5, low diffuse
cytoplasmic levels of occludin were observed in cells of the testicular
cords. By embryonic day 18.5, the level of occludin was still low but
appeared as a filiform-like network streaming toward the center of the
cord. At postnatal days 5 and 7 immunostaining became more intense and
appeared to outline the periphery of Sertoli cells of seminiferous
tubules. Postnatal day 14 marked the appearance of an intense, focal
band-like localization of occludin at the base of the tubules,
correlating with the appearance of a functional blood-testis barrier.
By day 23 and in adults, expression of occludin was noted at the base
of the tubule appearing as intense, wavy, discontinuous bands similar
in appearance irrespective of the stage of the seminiferous epithelium
cycle. In the developing epididymis, intense cytoplasmic immunostaining
was present in epithelial cells of many epididymal tubules at embryonic
day 13.5. By embryonic day 16.5, intense occludin immunostaining
appeared along the lateral plasma membranes of epithelial cells,
whereas at embryonic day 18.5, immunostaining was punctate and apically
located, suggesting the presence of tight junctions by this age;
similar immunostaining was noted at postnatal days 5 and 7. In the
adult epididymis, distinct punctate apical staining was observed
between adjacent principal cells of all epididymal regions except the
proximal initial segment, where occludin was found only in association
with narrow cells. These results indicate that in the epididymis, the
appearance of occludin at apical sites between adjacent epithelial
cells occurs during embryonic development suggesting that tight
junctions form earlier than in the testis. While occludin was expressed
in a similar pattern between Sertoli cells at all stages of the cycle
in the adult testis, its expression in the adult epididymis was cell-
and region-specific. Taken together these data suggest that different
factors regulate occludin expression in the testis and epididymis. |
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ISSN: | 0013-7227 1945-7170 |
DOI: | 10.1210/endo.140.8.6903 |