Journal of Andrology, Vol. 24, No. 3, May/June 2003
Copyright © American Society of Andrology
Regulation of Sulfated Glycoprotein-1 and Cathepsin D Expression in Adult Rat Epididymis
LOUIS HERMO AND
SERO ANDONIAN
From the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, McGill University,
Montréal, Québec, Canada.
| Correspondence to: Dr Louis Hermo, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology,
McGill University, 3640 University Street Room 1/33, Montréal,
Québec, Canada, H3A 2B2 (e-mail:
louishermo{at}mcgill.ca). |
Endocytosis, whereby proteins are internalized from the epididymal lumen to
be eventually degraded in lysosomes, is one of the major functions of the
epididymal epithelial cells in maintaining a proper luminal milieu conducive
for sperm maturation. In the present study, using light microscope
immunocytochemical methods, we examined the regulation of 2 lysosomal enzymes,
sulfated glycoprotein-1 (SGP-1) and cathepsin D, in adult rat epididymides
fixed in Bouin fixative and embedded in paraffin. After orchidectomy (O) with
or without testosterone (T) supplementation, efferent duct ligation (EDL), or
hypophysectomy (H), lysosomes of principal cells were intensely reactive with
the anti-SGP-1 antibody, as were narrow, clear, and basal cells, with staining
patterns similar to that of control animals. These experimental procedures
also had no effect on cathepsin D expression in all cell types, except for
clear cells of the corpus and cauda epididymidis, which after orchiedectomy
and hypophysectomy, became intensely reactive, unlike their completely
unreactive state in control animals. In O+T animals, as well as in EDL
animals, clear cells remained unreactive. These data taken together suggest
that expression of SGP-1 is not under the control of testicular or pituitary
factors, as is also the case for cathepsin D expression by principal, narrow,
and basal cells. However, specific inhibition of cathepsin D expression by
testosterone or one of its metabolites appears to occur in clear cells of the
corpus and cauda epididymidis. Furthermore, in addition to small, typical
lysosomes, principal cells also revealed large supranuclear and infranuclear
spherical structures that were immunoreactive with both anti-SGP-1 and
anti-cathepsin D antibodies, suggesting their lysosomal nature. With electron
microscopy, these structures appeared electron-lucent and contained membranous
profiles embedded in an electron-dense, granular background. Such images
suggest that the various experimental procedures adversely affect the
expression of several other lysosomal enzymes in principal cells, leading to a
lysosomal phenotype similar to that observed in various lysosomal storage
diseases.
Key words: Light microscopy, orchidectomy, ligation, hypophysectomy, immunocytochemistry
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Copyright © 2003 by The American Society of Andrology.