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BOR - Papers in Press, published online ahead of print April 28, 2004.
Biol Reprod 2004, 10.1095/biolreprod.104.028225
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Submitted February 6, 2004
Returned for revision March 8, 2004
Accepted April 14, 2004

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Extracellular Matrix: Recent Advances on Its Role in Junction Dynamics in the Seminiferous Epithelium During Spermatogenesis

Michelle K. Y. Siu and C. Yan Cheng *

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: y-cheng{at}popcbr.rockefeller.edu.

Abstract
Spermatogenesis takes place in the seminiferous epithelium of the mammalian testis in which one type A1 spermatogonium (diploid, 2n) gives rise to 256 spermatids (haploid, 1n). To accomplish this, developing germ cells, such as preleptotene and leptotene spermatocytes, residing in the basal compartment of the seminiferous epithelium must traverse the blood-testis barrier (BTB) entering into the adluminal compartment for further development into round, elongating, and elongate spermatids. Recent studies have shown that the basement membrane in the testis (a modified form of extracellular matrix, ECM) is important to the event of germ cell movement across the BTB since proteins in the ECM were shown to regulate BTB dynamics via the interactions between collagens, proteases, and protease inhibitors, possibly under the regulation of cytokines. While these findings are intriguing, they are not entirely unexpected. For one, the basement membrane in the testis is intimately associated with the BTB, which represents the basolateral region of Sertoli cells. Also, Sertoli cell tight junctions (TJs) that constitute the BTB are present side-by-side with cell-cell actin-based adherens junctions [AJ, such as basal ectoplasmic specialization (ES)] and intermediate filament-based desmosome-like junctions. As such, the relative morphological layout between TJs, AJs and desmosome-like junctions in the seminiferous epithelium is in sharp contrast to other epithelia where TJs are located at the apical portion of an epithelium or endothelium, furthest away from ECM, to be followed by AJs and desmosome, which in turn constitute the junctional complex. For another, anchoring junctions between a cell epithelium and ECM found in multiple tissues, also known as focal contacts (or focal adhesion complex, FAC, an actin-based cell-matrix anchoring junction type), are the most efficient junction type that permits rapid junction restructuring to accommodate cell movement. It is therefore physiologically plausible, and perhaps essential, that the testis is using some components of the focal contacts to regulate rapid restructuring of AJs between Sertoli and germ cells when germ cells traverse the seminiferous epithelium. Indeed, recent findings have shown that the apical ES, a testis-specific AJ type in the seminiferous epithelium, is equipped with proteins of FAC to regulate its restructuring. In this review, we provide a timely update on this exciting yet rapidly developing field regarding how the homeostasis of basement membrane in the tunica propria regulates BTB dynamics and spermatogenesis per se in the testis, as well as the molecular architecture and the regulation of ES in the seminiferous epithelium.

Key words: Testis • Kinases • Sertoli cells • Signal transduction • Spermatogenesis


This article has been cited by other articles:


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M. K. Y. Siu, C.-h. Wong, W. M. Lee, and C. Y. Cheng
Sertoli-Germ Cell Anchoring Junction Dynamics in the Testis Are Regulated by an Interplay of Lipid and Protein Kinases
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C.-h. Wong, D. D. Mruk, M. K. Y. Siu, and C. Y. Cheng
Blood-Testis Barrier Dynamics Are Regulated by {alpha}2-Macroglobulin via the c-Jun N-Terminal Protein Kinase Pathway
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C.-H. Wong, W. Xia, N. P. Y. Lee, D. D. Mruk, W. M. Lee, and C. Y. Cheng
Regulation of Ectoplasmic Specialization Dynamics in the Seminiferous Epithelium by Focal Adhesion-Associated Proteins in Testosterone-Suppressed Rat Testes
Endocrinology, March 1, 2005; 146(3): 1192 - 1204.
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