4.4 Article

Isolation of Sertoli Cells and Peritubular Cells from Rat Testes

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 108, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/53389

Keywords

Immunology; Issue 108; testis; primary rat Sertoli cells; primary peritubular cells; male reproduction; immune privilege; immunoprotection; urogenital tract infection; male factor infertility

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [BH 93/1-1]
  2. International Research Graduate College JLU Giessen (Germany)/Monash University (Melbourne, Australia) [GRK 1871]
  3. State of Hessen

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The testis, and in particular the male gamete, challenges the immune system in a unique way because differentiated sperm first appear at the time of puberty - more than ten years after the establishment of systemic immune tolerance. Spermatogenic cells express a number of proteins that may be seen as non-self by the immune system. The testis must then be able to establish tolerance to these neo-antigens on the one hand but still be able to protect itself from infections and tumor development on the other hand. Therefore the testis is one of a few immune privileged sites in the body that tolerate foreign antigens without evoking a detrimental inflammatory immune response. Sertoli cells play a key role for the maintenance of this immune privileged environment of the testis and also prolong survival of cotransplanted cells in a foreign environment. Therefore primary Sertoli cells are an important tool for studying the immune privilege of the testis that cannot be easily replaced by established cell lines or other cellular models. Here we present a detailed and comprehensive protocol for the isolation of Sertoli cells - and peritubular cells if desired - from rat testes within a single day.

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