Differential effects of spermatogenesis and fertility in mice lacking androgen receptor in individual testis cells
- 12 December 2006
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (50) , 18975-18980
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0608565103
Abstract
Using a Cre-Lox conditional knockout strategy, we generated a germ cell-specific androgen receptor (AR) knockout mouse (G-AR(-/y)) with normal spermatogenesis. Sperm count and motility in epididymis from AR(-/y) mice are similar to that of WT (G-AR(+/y)) mice. Furthermore, fertility tests show there was no difference in fertility, and almost 100% of female pups sired by G-AR(-/y) males younger than 15 weeks carried the deleted AR allele, suggesting the efficient AR knockout occurred in germ cells during meiosis. Together, these data provide in vivo evidence showing male mice without AR in germ cells can still have normal spermatogenesis and fertility, suggesting the essential roles of AR during spermatogenesis might come from indirect cell-cell communication in a paracrine fashion. We then compared the consequences of AR loss in the spermatogenesis and fertility of G-AR(-/y) mice with two other testicular cell-specific AR(-/y) mice and total AR knockout male mice. The results provide clear in vivo evidence that androgen/AR signaling in Sertoli cells plays a direct important role in spermatogenesis and in Leydig cells plays an autocrine regulatory role to modulate Leydig cell steroidogenic function. Total AR knockout male mice have the most severe defects among these mice. These contrasting data with G-AR(-/y) mice suggest AR might have different roles in the various cells within testis to contribute to normal spermatogenesis and male fertility in mice.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Advances in Male ContraceptionEndocrine Reviews, 2008
- Cre expression in primary spermatocytes: A tool for genetic engineering of the germ lineMolecular Reproduction and Development, 1998
- Immunohistochemical localization of androgen receptor in mouse testicular germ cells during fetal and postnatal developmentThe Anatomical Record, 1996
- Cytochrome P-450 17α-hydroxylase protein and mRNA in the testis of the testicular feminized (Tfm) mouseJournal of Molecular Endocrinology, 1993
- Immunocytochemical localization of androgen receptor with polyclonal antibody in paraffin-embedded human tissues.Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1993
- Testicular steroidogenesis in the testicular feminized (Tfm) mouse: loss of 17α-hydroxylase activityJournal of Endocrinology, 1991
- Immunohistochemical localization of androgen receptors with mono- and polyclonal antibodies to androgen receptorJournal of Endocrinology, 1990
- A complete form of testicular feminisation syndrome; a light and electron microscopy studyThe Journal of Pathology, 1978
- Absence of a nuclear androgen receptor in isolated germinal cells of rat testisMolecular and Cellular Endocrinology, 1977
- Androgen binding sites in testis cell fractions as measured by a nuclear exchange assayThe Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 1975