Development of Sertoli cell junctional specializations and the distribution of the tight‐junction‐associated protein ZO‐1 in the mouse testis
- 1 May 1991
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Anatomy
- Vol. 191 (1) , 35-47
- https://doi.org/10.1002/aja.1001910104
Abstract
Basally located tight junctions between Sertoli cells in the postpubertal testis are the largest and most complex junctional complexes known. They form at puberty and are thought to be the major structural component of the “blood–testis” barrier. We have now examined the development of these structures in the immature mouse testis in conjunction with immunolocalization of the tight‐junction‐associated proteins ZO‐1 (zonula occludens 1). In testes from 5‐day‐old mice, tight junctional complexes are absent and ZO‐1 is distributed generally over the apicolateral, but not basal, Sertoli cell membrane. As cytoskeletal and reticular elements characteristic of the mature junction are recruited to the developing junctions, between 7 and 14 days. ZO‐1 becomes progressively restricted to tight junctional regions. Immunogold labeling of ZO‐1 on Sertoli cell plasma membrane preparations revealed specific localization to the cytoplasmic surface of tight junctional regions. In the mature animal, ZO‐1 is similarly associated with tight junctional complexes in the basal aspects of the epithelium. In addition, it is also localized to Sertoli cell ectoplasmic specializations adjacent to early elongating, but not late, spermatids just prior to sperm release. Although these structures are not tight junctions, they do have a similar cytoskeletal arrangement, suggesting that ZO‐1 interacts with the submembrane cytoskeleton. These results show that, in the immature mouse testis, ZO‐1 is present on the Sertoli cell plasma membrane in the absence of recognizable tight junctions. In the presence of tight junctions however, ZO‐1 is found only at the sites of junctional specializations associated with tight junctions and with elongating spermatids.Keywords
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