Role of sulfated glycoprotein‐1 (SGP‐1) in the disposal of residual bodies by sertoli cells of the rat
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Reproduction and Development
- Vol. 40 (1) , 91-102
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mrd.1080400112
Abstract
Sulfated glycoprotein‐1 (SGP‐1) is a polypeptide secreted by Sertoli cells in the rat. Sequence analysis revealed a 76% sequence similarity with human prosaposin produced by various cell types. Human prosaposin is a 70 kDa protein which is cleaved in the lysosomes into four 10–15 kDa polypeptides termed saposins A, B, C, and D. The function of lysosomal saposins is to either solubilize certain membrane glycolipids or to form complexes with lysosomal enzymes and/or their glycolipid substrate to facilitate their hydrolysis. The present investigation dealt with the delivery of SGP‐1 into the phagosomes of Sertoli cells; these phagosomes contain the residual bodies which detach from the late spermatids at the time of spermiation. Immunogold labeling with anti‐SGP‐1 antibody was found over Sertoli cell lysosomes, but was absent from phagosomes formed after phagocytosis of spermatid residual bodies in the apical Sertoli cell cytoplasm in stages VIII and early IX of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. The phagosomes found later in the basal Sertoli cell cytoplasm in stages IX and X of the cycle became labeled with the antibody as the components of the residual bodies rapidly underwent lysis and disappeared from the Sertoli cells. Sertoli cell lysosomes isolated by cell fractionation (estimated purity of 80%) were found to contain a 65 kDa form of SGP‐1 or prosaposin, as well as the 15 kDa polypeptides or saposins. Thus, it appears that this unique lysosomal form of SGP‐1 reached the Sertoli cell phagosomes and that their derived polypeptides, the saposins, must play a role in the hydrolysis of membrane glycolipids found in phagocytosed residual bodies.Keywords
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