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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 51, 865-872, Copyright © 1994 by Society for the Study of Reproduction


ARTICLES

Experimentally induced cryptorchidism increases apoptosis in rat testis

T Shikone, H Billig and AJ Hsueh
Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Stanford University Medical Center, California 94305-5317.

Although surgical induction of cryptorchidism in the rat is known to cause infertility due to disruption of spermatogenesis, the exact cellular mechanism responsible for the degenerative changes in cryptorchid testes is unclear. Using a sensitive autoradiographic method for the detection of apoptotic DNA fragmentation, we have investigated the effect of experimentally induced cryptorchidism on apoptotic cell death in testes of immature rats. Bilateral or unilateral cryptorchidism decreased the weight of affected testes within 4 days; these decreases (24-27%) became significant (P < 0.05) at 7 days after the operation. Testes of sham-operated animals contained predominantly high molecular weight DNA (> 15 kb), whereas DNA cleavage into low molecular weight ladders characteristic of apoptosis was increased by induction of bilateral cryptorchidism in a time-dependent manner, i.e., 2.0-, 2.8-, and 4.2-fold (p < 0.05) at 2, 4, and 7 days after operation, respectively. In unilaterally cryptorchid animals, sham-operated testes also contained predominantly high molecular weight DNA, whereas induction of cryptorchidism of the contralateral testes increased DNA cleavage into low molecular weight fragments 3.0-, 2.8-, and 3.9-fold (p < 0.05) at 2, 4, and 7 days after the operation, respectively. In situ analysis of DNA fragmentation in testes of unilaterally cryptorchid rats at 7 days after the operation indicated that germ cells, mainly primary spermatocytes were affected and that the percentage of seminiferous tubules containing labeled cells increased in the operated testis as compared to the contralateral control in the same animal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)





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Copyright © 1994 by the Society for the Study of Reproduction.