scholarly journals Corrigendum to “Bisphenol S perturbs Sertoli cell junctions in male rats via alterations in cytoskeletal organization mediated by an imbalance between mTORC1 and mTORC2” [Sci. Total Environ., 762 (2021) 144059]

Author(s):  
Huan Wu ◽  
Yuexin Wei ◽  
Yu Zhou ◽  
Chunlan Long ◽  
Yifan Hong ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ferdyan Rachmat Efendi ◽  
Johan Renaldo ◽  
Tarmono Djojodimedjo

Objective: To investigate the effect of dexamethasone on spermatogonium and sertoli cell of ipsilateral testis in unilateral testicular torsion strain wistar rat. Material & Method: Experimental study with post-test only control group design. The present  study was conducted on 30 Wistar male rats aged 10 – 12 weeks grouped into 5 groups. Group I was the normal/sham operation group (KN), group II was left testicular torsion for 4 hours group and followed  by manual detorsion  (K1), group III was left testicular torsion for 10 hours group and followed  by manual detorsion (K2),  group IV was left testicular torsion for 4 hours group and given dexamethasone 10 mg/kg body weight subcutaneously 30 minutes before manual etorsion (D1), and group V was left testicular torsion for 10 hours group and  given dexamethasone 10 mg/kg body weight subcutaneously 30 minutes before manual detorsion. All rats had left orchidectomy 4 hours after detorsion. The number of spermatogonium and sertoli cells were counted in histological seminiferous tubular testis that have obtained Haematoxylin Eosin staining. Data were analyzed by ANNOVA followed by Post Hoc Tukey for spermatogonium and Kruskal Wallis followed by Mann Whitney test for sertoli cell. Differences were considered significant at p <0.05. Results: There was significant difference in the mean number of spermatogonium between K1 & D1 group. Otherwise, there was no significant difference in the mean number of spermatogonium between K2 & D2. There was significant difference in the mean number of Sertoli cells between K1 & D1 group, likewise that between K2 & D2 group. Conclusion: These results suggest that dexamethasone has protective effect in spermatogonium and sertoli cell in testicular torsion for 4 hours.


Endocrinology ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 141 (10) ◽  
pp. 3898-3907 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Atanassova ◽  
C. McKinnell ◽  
K. J. Turner ◽  
M. Walker ◽  
J. S. Fisher ◽  
...  

Abstract This study investigated whether neonatal exposure of male rats to estrogenic compounds altered pubertal spermatogenesis (days 18 and 25) and whether the changes observed resulted in long-term changes in testis size, mating, or fertility (days 90–100). Rats were treated neonatally with a range of doses (0.01–10 μg) of diethylstilbestrol (DES; administered on alternate days from days 2–12), a high dose of octylphenol (OP; 2 mg administered daily from days 2–12) or bisphenol A (Bis-A; 0.5 mg administered daily from days 2–12), or vehicle, while maintained on a standard soy-containing diet. The effect on the same parameters of rearing control animals on a soy-free diet was also assessed as was the effect of administering such animals genistein (4 mg/kg/day daily from days 2–18). Testis weight, seminiferous tubule lumen formation, the germ cell apoptotic index (apoptotic/viable germ cell nuclear volume), and spermatocyte nuclear volume per unit Sertoli cell nuclear volume were used to characterize pubertal spermatogenesis. Compared with (soy-fed) controls, DES administration caused dose-dependent retardation of pubertal spermatogenesis on day 18, as evidenced by decreases in testis weight, lumen formation, and spermatocyte nuclear volume per unit Sertoli cell and elevation of the germ cell apoptotic index. However, the two lowest doses of DES (0.1 and 0.01 μg) significantly increased spermatocyte nuclear volume per unit Sertoli cell. Similarly, treatment with either OP or Bis-A significantly advanced this and some of the other aspects of pubertal spermatogenesis. Maintenance of control animals on a soy-free diet also significantly advanced lumen formation and spermatocyte nuclear volume per unit Sertoli cell compared with controls fed a soy-containing diet. Administration of genistein reversed the stimulatory effects of a soy-free diet and significantly retarded most measures of pubertal spermatogenesis. In general, plasma FSH levels in the treatment groups changed in parallel to the spermatogenic changes (reduced when pubertal spermatogenesis retarded, increased when pubertal spermatogenesis advanced). By day 25, although the changes in FSH levels largely persisted, all of the stimulatory effects on spermatogenesis seen on day 18 in the various treatment groups were no longer evident. In adulthood, testis weight was decreased dose dependently in rats treated neonatally with DES, but only the lowest dose group (0.01 μg) showed evidence of mating (3 of 6) and normal fertility (3 litters). Animals treated neonatally with OP or Bis-A had normal or increased (Bis-A) testis weights and exhibited reasonably normal mating/fertility. Animals fed a soy-free diet had significantly larger testes than controls fed a soy-containing diet, and this difference was confirmed in a much larger study of more than 24 litters, which also showed a significant decrease in plasma FSH levels and a significant increase in body weight in the males kept on a soy-free diet. Neonatal treatment with genistein did not alter adult testis weight, and although most males exhibited normal mating and fertility, a minority did not mate or were infertile. It is concluded that 1) neonatal exposure of rats to low levels of estrogens can advance the first wave of spermatogenesis at puberty, although it is unclear whether this is due to direct effects of the estrogen or to associated elevation of FSH levels; 2) the effect of high doses of OP and Bis-A on these processes is essentially benign; and 3) the presence or absence of soy or genistein in the diet has significant short-term (pubertal spermatogenesis) and long-term (body weight, testis size, FSH levels, and possibly mating) effects on males.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 760-770 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oluwajoba O. Akinjo ◽  
Timothy W. Gant ◽  
Emma L. Marczylo

Doxorubicin-induced testicular toxicity involves perturbation of microRNAs within all three of the main testicular cell types, particularly those involved in germ–Sertoli and Sertoli–Sertoli cell junctions.


1978 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. HAGENÄS ◽  
L. PLÖEN ◽  
H. EKWALL

SUMMARY To study the hormonal dependence of the blood–testis barrier, adult rats were hypophysectomized and the ultrastructural integrity of the inter-Sertoli cell junctional complex was examined at various times with a lanthanum tracer technique. It was found that the structural integrity of the inter-Sertoli cell junctions and their capacity to exclude lanthanum from the adluminal compartment were preserved up to 35 days after hypophysectomy. Furthermore, transport of newly formed spermatocytes through the inter-Sertoli cell junctions still occurred 20 days after hypophysectomy. It is therefore concluded that the function of the inter-Sertoli cell junctional complex is not directly dependent on gonadotrophic or androgenic hormones, but is regulated by other mechanisms.


1997 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. 2329-2344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cuiling Zhong ◽  
Michael S. Kinch ◽  
Keith Burridge

Oncogenic transformation of cells alters their morphology, cytoskeletal organization, and adhesive interactions. When the mammary epithelial cell line MCF10A is transformed by activated H-Ras, the cells display a mesenchymal/fibroblastic morphology with decreased cell–cell junctions but increased focal adhesions and stress fibers. We have investigated whether the transformed phenotype is due to Rho activation. The Ras-transformed MCF10A cells have elevated levels of myosin light chain phosphorylation and are more contractile than their normal counterparts, consistent with the activation of Rho. Furthermore, inhibitors of contractility restore a more normal epithelial phenotype to the Ras-transformed MCF10A cells. However, inhibiting Rho by microinjection of C3 exotransferase or dominant negative RhoA only partially restores the normal phenotype, in that it fails to restore normal junctional organization. This result prompted us to examine the effect that inhibiting Rho would have on the junctions of normal MCF10A cells. We have found that inhibiting Rho by C3 microinjection leads to a disruption of E-cadherin cytoskeletal links in adherens junctions and blocks the assembly of new adherens junctions. The introduction of constitutively active Rho into normal MCF10A cells did not mimic the Ras-transformed phenotype. Thus, these results lead us to conclude that some, but not all, characteristics of Ras-transformed epithelial cells are due to activated Rho. Whereas Rho is needed for the assembly of adherens junctions, high levels of activated Rho in Ras-transformed cells contribute to their altered cytoskeletal organization. However, additional events triggered by Ras must also be required for the disruption of adherens junctions and the full development of the transformed epithelial phenotype.


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