Journal of Andrology, Vol. 25, No. 1, January/February 2004
Copyright © American Society of Andrology
Vasectomy Influences Expression of HE1 but not HE2 and HE5 Genes in Human Epididymis
CHRISTINE LÉGARÉ*,
NANCY VERVILLE* AND
ROBERT SULLIVAN
From the * Centre de Recherche en Biologie de la
Reproduction and the
Département
d'Obstétrique-Gynécologie, Faculté de Médecine,
Université Laval, Ste-Foy, Québec, Canada.
|
Correspondence to: Dr Robert Sullivan, Unité
d'Ontogénie-Reproduction, Centre de Recherche, Centre Hospitalier de
l'Université Laval, 2705 Boul Laurier, Ste-Foy, Québec, Canada
G1V 4G2 (e-mail
robert.sullivan{at}crchul.ulaval.ca). |
Epididymal roles include protection and transport, maturation, and storage
of the sperm cells. It is known that these functions are altered under
vasectomy, but the consequences of excurrent duct obstruction on the pattern
of gene expression along the human epididymis are poorly documented. In order
to understand how excurrent duct occlusion affects different epididymal
regions, the expression pattern of genes known to be expressed in specific
epididymal segments was investigated along the epididymides of vasectomized
men. Selected human epididymal complementary DNAs (cDNAs) identified by
differential library screening were studied because of their unique messenger
RNA (mRNA) distribution along the different epididymal segments. In situ
hybridization as well as immunohistologic studies were undertaken to
investigate the effect of vasectomy on a gene expressed all along the
epididymis (HE1) or more selectively in the proximal (HE2) or distal (HE5)
segment. The HE1 transcript was affected by the obstruction of the epididymis
with little or no mRNA detectable along the epididymis. The HE1-related
antigen was shown by immunohistochemical methods to be reduced within the
epithelium of the epididymis of vasectomized men. By contrast, HE5 mRNA and
protein, expressed in epithelial cells of the distal epididymis, were not
affected by the obstruction of the vas deferens. Similarly, HE2
transcriptional and translational products normally expressed in the caput
epididymidis were not affected by vasectomy. These results show that excurrent
duct obstruction differentially affects the expression pattern of some
specific transcripts and their encoded proteins, probably impairing their
fundamental roles in the physiology of the epididymis.
Key words: Gene expression, sperm maturation
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Copyright © 2004 by The American Society of Andrology.