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Biology of Reproduction 60, 1036-1046 (1999)
©Copyright 1999 Society for the Study of Reproduction, Inc.

Spermatid Translocation in the Rat Seminiferous Epithelium: Coupling Membrane Trafficking Machinery to a Junction Plaque1

Scott F. Beacha, and A. Wayne Vogl2,a

a Department of Anatomy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z3

In this study, we demonstrate that specialized junction plaques that occur between Sertoli cells and spermatids in the rat testis support microtubule translocation in vitro. During spermatogenesis, Sertoli cells are attached to spermatids by specialized adhesion junctions termed ectoplasmic specializations (ESs). These structures consist of regions of the plasma membrane adherent to the spermatid head, a submembrane layer of tightly packed actin filaments, and an attached cistern of endoplasmic reticulum. It has been proposed that motor proteins on the endoplasmic reticulum interact with adjacent microtubules to translocate the junction plaques, and hence the attached spermatids, within the epithelium. If this hypothesis is true, then isolated junctions should support microtubule transport. To verify this prediction, we have mechanically isolated rat spermatids, together with their attached ESs, and tested them for their ability to transport microtubules in vitro. Most assays were done in the presence of 2 mg/ml testicular cytosol and at room temperature. ESs attached to spermatids supported microtubule translocation. In some cases in which motility events were detected, microtubules moved smoothly over the junction site. In others, the movement was slow but progressive, saltatory and "inch-worm-like." No motility was detected in the absence of exogenous ATP or in the presence of apyrase (an enzyme that catalyses the breakdown of ATP). Our results are consistent with the microtubule-based motility hypothesis of spermatid translocation.

1 Supported by BCHRF grant #1(95–1) and MRC grant #MT-13389.

2 Correspondence: A. Wayne Vogl, Department of Anatomy, 2177 Wesbrook Mall, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z3. FAX: 604 822 2316; vogl{at}unixg.ubc.ca




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