scholarly journals Induction of Sertoli-like cells from human fibroblasts by NR5A1 and GATA4

eLife ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianlin Liang ◽  
Nan Wang ◽  
Jing He ◽  
Jian Du ◽  
Yahui Guo ◽  
...  

Sertoli cells are essential nurse cells in the testis that regulate the process of spermatogenesis and establish the immune-privileged environment of the blood-testis-barrier (BTB). Here, we report the in vitro reprogramming of fibroblasts to human induced Sertoli-like cells (hiSCs). Initially, five transcriptional factors and a gene reporter carrying the AMH promoter were utilized to obtain the hiSCs. We further reduce the number of reprogramming factors to two, NR5A1 and GATA4, and show that these hiSCs have transcriptome profiles and cellular properties that are similar to those of primary human Sertoli cells. Moreover, hiSCs can sustain the viability of spermatogonia cells harvested from mouse seminiferous tubules. hiSCs suppress the proliferation of human T lymphocytes and protect xenotransplanted human cells in mice with normal immune systems. hiSCs also allow us to determine a gene associated with Sertoli cell only syndrome (SCO), CX43, is indeed important in regulating the maturation of Sertoli cells.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianlin Liang ◽  
Nan Wang ◽  
Jing He ◽  
Jian Du ◽  
Yahui Guo ◽  
...  

AbstractSertoli cells are essential nurse cells in the testis that regulate the process of spermatogenesis and establish the immune-privileged environment of the blood-testis-barrier (BTB). The induction of human Sertoli cells from fibroblasts could provide cellular sources for fertility and transplantation treatments. Here, we report the in vitro reprogramming of human fibroblasts to Sertoli cells and characterize these human induced Sertoli cells (hiSCs). Initially, five transcriptional factors (NR5A1, GATA4, WT1, SOX9 and DMRT1) and a gene reporter carrying the AMH promoter were utilized to obtain the hiSCs. We further reduce the number of reprogramming factors to two, i.e., NR5A1 and GATA4, and show that these hiSCs have transcriptome profiles that are similar to those of primary human Sertoli cells. Consistent with the known cellular properties of Sertoli cells, hiSCs attract endothelial cells and exhibit high number of lipid droplets in the cytoplasm. More importantly, hiSCs can sustain the viability of spermatogonia cells harvested from mouse seminiferous tubules. In addition, hiSCs suppress the production of IL-2 and proliferation of human T lymphocytes. When hiSCs were cotransplanted with human embryonic kidney cells, these xenotransplanted human cells survived longer in mice with normal immune systems. hiSCs also allow us to determine a gene associated with Sertoli-only syndrome (SCO), CX43, is indeed important in regulating the maturation of Sertoli cells.


2010 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 66
Author(s):  
P. K. Nicholls ◽  
P. G. Stanton ◽  
K. L. Walton ◽  
R. I. McLachlan ◽  
L. O'Donnell ◽  
...  

Spermatogenesis is absolutely dependent on follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and androgens; acute suppression of these hormones inhibits germ cell development and thus sperm production. The removal of intercellular junctions and release of spermatids by the Sertoli cell, a process known as spermiation, is particularly sensitive to acute hormone suppression(1). To define the molecular mechanisms that mediate FSH and androgen effects in the testis, we investigated the expression and hormonal regulation of micro-RNAs (miRNA), small non-coding RNAs that regulate protein translation and modify cellular responses. By array analysis, we identified 23 miRNAs that were upregulated >2-fold in stage VIII seminiferous tubules following hormone suppression, and in vitro in primary Sertoli cells. We subsequently validated the expression and hormonal regulation of several miRNAs, including miR-23b, -30d and -690 by quantitative PCR in primary Sertoli cells. Bioinformatic analysis of potential targets of hormonally-suppressed miRNAs identified genes associated with Focal adhesions (54 genes, P = –ln(17.97)) and the Regulation of the actin cytoskeleton (52 genes, P = –ln(10.16)), processes known to be intimately associated with adhesion of spermatids to Sertoli cells(2, 3). Furthermore, this analysis identified numerous components of the testicular tubulobulbar complex (TBC) as being targets of hormonally sensitive miRNAs. The TBC is a podosome-like structure between Sertoli and adjacent spermatids in the testis, which internalises intact inter-cellular junctions by endocytotic mechanisms prior to spermiation(4). We then demonstrate the hormonal regulation of predicted miRNA target proteins, and validate novel inhibitory miRNA interactions with Pten, nWASP, Eps15 and Picalm by luciferase knockdown in vitro. We hypothesise that hormonally suppressed miRNAs inhibit TBC function, and subsequently, endocytosis of intercellular junctions. In conclusion, we have demonstrated that hormonal suppression in the testis stimulates the expression of a subset of Sertoli cell miRNAs that are likely regulators of cell adhesion protein networks involved in spermiation. (1) Saito K, O’Donnell L, McLachlan RI, Robertson DM 2000 Spermiation failure is a major contributor to early spermatogenic suppression caused by hormone withdrawal in adult rats. Endocrinology 141: 2779–2.(2) O’Donnell L, Stanton PG, Bartles JR, Robertson DM 2000 Sertoli cell ectoplasmic specializations in the seminiferous epithelium of the testosterone-suppressed adult rat. Biol Reprod 63: 99–108.(3) Beardsley A, Robertson DM, O’Donnell L 2006 A complex containing alpha6beta1-integrin and phosphorylated focal adhesion kinase between Sertoli cells and elongated spermatids during spermatid release from the seminiferous epithelium. J Endocrinol 190(3): 759–70.(4) Young JS, Guttman JA, Vaid KS, Vogl AW 2009 Tubulobulbar complexes are intercellular podosome-like structures that internalize intact intercellular junctions during epithelial remodeling events in the rat testis. Biol Reprod 80: 162–74.


2017 ◽  
Vol 29 (8) ◽  
pp. 1635 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Dance ◽  
J. Kastelic ◽  
J. Thundathil

Beef and dairy bull calves fed a low-nutrition diet during early life had decreased concentrations of circulating insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), delayed increases in testosterone, smaller testes and delayed puberty compared with those fed high-nutrition diets. Although IGF-1 has important roles in Sertoli cell function in rats and mice, this has not been well documented in bulls. The objectives of this study were to: (1) isolate Sertoli cells from bull calves at 8 weeks of age, (2) culture them in vitro and (3) determine the effects of IGF-I, FSH and a combination of both hormones on cell proliferation. For Sertoli cell isolation, minced testicular tissues were treated with collagenase followed by trypsin and hyaluronidase to digest seminiferous tubules and release Sertoli cells. In this study, Sertoli cells were successfully isolated from 8-week-old Holstein bull calves (n = 4) and these cells were cultured for up to 8 days. A combination of IGF-I and FSH increased proliferation (~18%) and therefore cell number (1.5-fold) of prepubertal bovine Sertoli cells in culture, providing clear evidence that IGF-I has a similar role in bovine Sertoli cells as reported in rodents.


1988 ◽  
Vol 118 (3) ◽  
pp. R13-R16 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. LE MAGUERESSE ◽  
C. PINEAU ◽  
F. GUILLOU ◽  
B. JEGOU

ABSTRACT Indirect approach (hypotonic treatment) and direct approaches (co-cultures and conditioned media) were used in order to investigate the effects of germ cells from adult rats upon transferrin secretion by Sertoli cell cultures prepared from 20-day-old rats. Removal of germ cells contaminating the Sertoli cell cultures resulted in a significant decrease in transferrin secretion whereas the addition of crude germ cell preparations or of enriched preparations of pachytene spermatocytes, early spermatids and of liver epithelial cells (LEC) markedly stimulated this parameter. Furthermore, spent media of pachytene spermatocytes and of early spermatids, but not of LEC, also stimulated transferrin production. It is concluded that germ cells normally located within the adluminal compartment of the seminiferous tubules may be capable of controlling their own supply of iron via their influence upon transferrin secretion by the Sertoli cells.


Endocrinology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 155 (10) ◽  
pp. 3981-3995 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Ece Gungor-Ordueri ◽  
Elizabeth I. Tang ◽  
Ciler Celik-Ozenci ◽  
C. Yan Cheng

Abstract During spermatogenesis, the transport of spermatids and the release of sperms at spermiation and the remodeling of the blood-testis barrier (BTB) in the seminiferous epithelium of rat testes require rapid reorganization of the actin-based cytoskeleton. However, the mechanism(s) and the regulatory molecule(s) remain unexplored. Herein we report findings that unfold the functional significance of ezrin in the organization of the testis-specific adherens junction at the spermatid-Sertoli cell interface called apical ectoplasmic specialization (ES) in the adluminal compartment and the Sertoli cell-cell interface known as basal ES at the BTB. Ezrin is expressed at the basal ES/BTB in all stages, except from late VIII to IX, of the epithelial cycle. Its knockdown by RNA interference (RNAi) in vitro perturbs the Sertoli cell tight junction-permeability barrier via a disruption of the actin microfilaments in Sertoli cells, which in turn impeded basal ES protein (eg, N-cadherin) distribution, perturbing the BTB function. These findings were confirmed by a knockdown study in vivo. However, the expression of ezrin at the apical ES is restricted to stage VIII of the cycle and limited only between step 19 spermatids and Sertoli cells. A knockdown of ezrin in vivo by RNAi was found to impede spermatid transport, causing defects in spermiation in which spermatids were embedded deep inside the epithelium, and associated with a loss of spermatid polarity. Also, ezrin was associated with residual bodies and phagosomes, and its knockdown by RNAi in the testis also impeded the transport of residual bodies/phagosomes from the apical to the basal compartment. In summary, ezrin is involved in regulating actin microfilament organization at the ES in rat testes.


Development ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 120 (7) ◽  
pp. 1759-1766 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Yomogida ◽  
H. Ohtani ◽  
H. Harigae ◽  
E. Ito ◽  
Y. Nishimune ◽  
...  

GATA-1 is an essential factor for the transcriptional activation of erythroid-specific genes, and is also abundantly expressed in a discrete subset of cells bordering the seminiferous epithelium in tubules of the murine testis. In examining normal and germ-line defective mutant mice, we show here that GATA-1 is expressed only in the Sertoli cell lineage in mouse testis. GATA-1 expression in Sertoli cells is induced concomitantly with the first wave of spermatogenesis, and GATA-1-positive cells are uniformly distributed among all tubules during prepubertal testis development. However, the number of GATA-1-positive cells declines thereafter and were found only in the peripheral zone of seminiferous tubules in stages VII, VIII and IX of spermatogenesis in the adult mouse testis. In contrast, virtually every Sertoli cell in mutant W/Wv, jsd/jsd or cryptorchid mice (all of which lack significant numbers of germ cells) expresses GATA-1, thus showing that the expression of this transcription factor is negatively controlled by the maturing germ cells. These observations suggest that transcription factor GATA-1 is a developmental stage- and spermatogenic cycle-specific regulator of gene expression in Sertoli cells.


1999 ◽  
Vol 340 (1) ◽  
pp. 309-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sikha Bettina MUKHERJEE ◽  
S. ARAVINDA ◽  
B. GOPALAKRISHNAN ◽  
Sushma NAGPAL ◽  
Dinakar M. SALUNKE ◽  
...  

The seminiferous tubular fluid (STF) provides the microenvironment necessary for spermatogenesis in the adluminal compartment of the seminiferous tubule (ST), primarily through secretions of the Sertoli cell. Earlier studies from this laboratory demonstrated the presence of glutathione S-transferase (GST) in STF collected from adult rat testis and in the spent media of ST cultures. This study describes the cellular source, isoform composition and possible function of GSTs in the STF. The major GST isoforms present in STF in vivo share extensive N-terminal similarity with rat GSTM1 (rGSTM1), rGSTM2, rGSTM3 and rGST-Alpha. Molecular masses of rGSTM2, rGSTM3 and rGST-Alpha from liver and testis sources were similar, unlike STF-GSTM1, which was larger by 325 Da than its liver counterpart. Peptide digest analysis profiles on reverse-phase HPLC between liver and STF isoforms were identical, and N-terminal sequences of selected peptides obtained by digestion of the various isoforms were closely similar. The above results confirmed close structural similarity between liver and STF-GST isoforms. Active synthesis and secretion of GSTs by the STs were evident from recovery of radiolabelled GST from the spent media of ST cultures. Analysis of secreted GST isoforms showed that GST-Alpha was not secreted by the STs in vitro, whereas there was an induction of GST-Pi secretion. Detection of immunostainable GST-Mu in Sertoli cells in vitro and during different stages of the seminiferous epithelium in vivo, coupled with the recovery of radiolabelled GST from Sertoli cell-culture media, provided evidence for Sertoli cells as secretors of GST. In addition, STF of ‘Sertoli cell only’ animals showed no change in the profile of GST isoform secretion, thereby confirming Sertoli cells as prime GST secretors. Non-recovery of [35S]methionine-labelled GSTs from germ cell culture supernatants, but their presence in germ cell lysates, confirm the ability of the germ cells to synthesize, but not to release, GSTs. Functionally, STF-GSTM1 appeared to serve as a steroid-binding protein by its ability to bind to testosterone and oestradiol, two important hormones in the ST that are essential for spermatogenesis, with binding constants of < 9.8×10-7 M for testosterone and 9×10-6 M for oestradiol respectively.


2002 ◽  
Vol 172 (3) ◽  
pp. 565-574 ◽  
Author(s):  
RJ Clifton ◽  
L O'Donnell ◽  
DM Robertson

This study investigates the effects of spermatogenic germ cells on inhibin alpha-subunit and beta B-subunit expression, and inhibin alpha-subunit and inhibin B production by rat Sertoli cells in vitro. Sertoli cells isolated from 19-day-old rats were cultured for 48 h at 32 degrees C, in the presence or absence of FSH (2.3-2350 mIU/ml), and in the presence of pachytene spermatocytes, round spermatids or cytoplasts of elongated spermatids purified from adult rat testis by elutriation and density gradient separation. Sertoli cell secretion of inhibin alpha-subunit and inhibin B, as measured by immunoassay, was dose-dependently stimulated by FSH (maximal stimulation 13- and 2-fold, respectively). Round spermatids or cytoplasts co-cultured with Sertoli cells had no effect on basal or FSH-induced secretion of inhibin alpha-subunit or inhibin B. When Sertoli cells were co-cultured with pachytene spermatocytes, inhibin alpha-subunit secretion was unaltered, while inhibin B secretion was suppressed in a cell concentration-dependent manner to reach a maximal suppression of 45% compared with Sertoli cells alone (P<0.01). A similar suppression in inhibin B was still observed (64% of Sertoli cells alone) when the pachytene spermatocytes were separated from Sertoli cells by a 0.45 microm pore membrane barrier in bicameral chambers. Pachytene spermatocytes also suppressed FSH-induced inhibin B levels in Sertoli cell co-cultures and this suppression was attributed to a decrease in basal inhibin B production rather than a change in FSH responsiveness. Quantitation of Sertoli cell inhibin alpha- and beta B-subunit mRNA by quantitative (real-time) PCR demonstrated that pachytene spermatocytes did not alter Sertoli cell alpha-subunit mRNA expression, but significantly (P<0.01) suppressed basal and FSH-induced beta B-subunit mRNA expression to a similar degree to that seen with inhibin B protein levels. It is concluded that pachytene spermatocytes in vitro suppress Sertoli cell inhibin B secretion via factor-mediated suppression of inhibin beta B-subunit expression. These findings support the hypothesis that specific germ cell types can influence inhibin B secretion by the testis independent of FSH regulation.


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