NCAM mediates adhesion between gonocytes and Sertoli cells in cocultures from testes of neonatal rats
- PMID: 8575978
NCAM mediates adhesion between gonocytes and Sertoli cells in cocultures from testes of neonatal rats
Abstract
During neonatal development of the rat testis, gonocytes resume mitosis and display renewed motility to migrate toward the basal lamina, two events that occur in vitro when these cells are cocultured with Sertoli cells. However, although substantial evidence suggests that development of gonocytes depends on Sertoli cells, little is known of how these cell types interact beyond our previous observations that they communicate via gap junctions and adhere avidly to each other. In the present study, we utilized several approaches to examine the mechanism by which gonocytes adhere to Sertoli cells in vitro. First, we characterized this attachment in general by (1) determining its susceptibility to brief trypsinization in decreasing concentrations of Ca2+, (2) assessing the ability of gonocytes to adhere to Sertoli cells at reduced temperature, and (3) examining the effect of phospholipase C treatment on the number of gonocytes attached to a Sertoli cell monolayer. Because the findings suggested that a non-cadherin mechanism is involved, we used immunofluorescence to identify the presence of neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) at virtually all gonocyte-Sertoli cell (and Sertoli cell-Sertoli cell) boundaries and found that incubation of cocultures in the continuous presence of NCAM antibodies caused release of essentially all gonocytes (but not Sertoli cells) from the monolayer. We also found, in (3) above, that gonocyte-Sertoli cell adhesion was very susceptible to phospholipase C in cocultures isolated from newborns and maintained in vitro for 2 hours or 1 day but not in cultures maintained for 3 days. Moreover, cells isolated from pups 5 days old were as resistant to enzyme treatment at 2 hours postplating as were cultures from newborns after 3 days in vitro. Thus, the way in which gonocytes adhere to Sertoli cells appears to change during the immediate postnatal period, as reflected by the observed change in phopholipase sensitivity, perhaps indicating production of a phospholipase C-resistant NCAM isoform by several days after birth. These data constitute new information on the way in which postnatal gonocytes adhere to Sertoli cells and provide a basis for future work in our ongoing exploration of germ cell development in the neonatal rat testis.
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