Xenogeneic Spermatogenesis Following Transplantation of Hamster Germ Cells to Mouse Testes1
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Biology of Reproduction
- Vol. 60 (2) , 515-521
- https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod60.2.515
Abstract
It was recently demonstrated that rat spermatogenesis can occur in the seminiferous tubules of an immunodeficient recipient mouse after transplantation of testis cells from a donor rat. In the present study, hamster donor testis cells were transplanted to mice to determine whether xenogeneic spermatogenesis would result. The hamster diverged at least 16 million years ago from the mouse and produces spermatozoa that are larger than, and have a shape distinctly different from, those of the mouse. In four separate experiments with a total of 13 recipient mice, hamster spermatogenesis was identified in the testes of each mouse. Approximately 6% of the tubules examined demonstrated xenogeneic spermatogenesis. In addition, cryopreserved hamster testis cells generated spermatogenesis in recipients. However, abnormalities were noted in hamster spermatids and acrosomes in seminiferous tubules of recipient mice. Hamster spermatozoa were also found in the epididymis of recipient animals, but these spermatozoa generally lacked acrosomes, and heads and tails were separated. Thus, defects in spermiogenesis occur in hamster spermatogenesis in the mouse, which may reflect a limited ability of endogenous mouse Sertoli cells to support fully the larger and evolutionarily distant hamster germ cell. The generation of spermatogenesis from frozen hamster cells now adds this species to the mouse and rat, in which spermatogonial stem cells also can be cryopreserved. This finding has immediate application to valuable animals of many species, because the cells could be stored until suitable recipients are identified or culture techniques devised to expand the stem cell population.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- A molecular timescale for vertebrate evolutionNature, 1998
- Evolution of the primate lineage leading to modern humans: Phylogenetic and demographic inferences from DNA sequencesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997
- Reconstitution of spermatogenesis from frozen spermatogonial stem cellsNature Medicine, 1996
- Rat spermatogenesis in mouse testisNature, 1996
- Germline transmission of donor haplotype following spermatogonial transplantation.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Spermatogenesis following male germ-cell transplantation.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Nuclear Morphogenesis during SpermiogenesisPublished by Elsevier ,1993
- Morphometric studies on rat seminiferous tubulesJournal of Anatomy, 1982
- Spermatogenic cells of the prepuberal mouse: isolation and morphological characterizationThe Journal of cell biology, 1977
- Spermiogenesis of rat, mouse, hamster and guinea pig as revealed by the “periodic acid‐fuchsin sulfurous acid” techniqueJournal of Anatomy, 1952