4.6 Article

Differential effects of c-Src and c-Yes on the endocytic vesicle-mediated trafficking events at the Sertoli cell blood-testis barrier: an in vitro study

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00176.2014

Keywords

testis; spermatogenesis; seminiferous epithelial cycle; blood-testis barrier; endosome; transcytosis; recycling; ectoplasmic specialization; tight junction; c-Yes; c-Src

Funding

  1. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [U54-HD-029990, R01-HD-056034]
  2. Hong Kong Research Grants Council General Research Fund [771513]
  3. National Science Foundation of China [NSFC 31371176, NSFC 3126110491]
  4. NSFC/RGC Joint Research Scheme [N_HKU 717/12]
  5. Committee on Research and Conference Grants (University of Hong Kong)

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The blood-testis barrier (BTB) is one of the tightest blood-tissue barriers in the mammalian body. However, it undergoes cyclic restructuring during the epithelial cycle of spermatogenesis in which the old BTB located above the preleptotene spermatocytes being transported across the immunological barrier is disassembled, whereas the new BTB found behind these germ cells is rapidly reassembled, i.e., mediated by endocytic vesicle-mediated protein trafficking events. Thus, the immunological barrier is maintained when preleptotene spermatocytes connected in clones via intercellular bridges are transported across the BTB. Yet the underlying mechanism(s) in particular the involving regulatory molecules that coordinate these events remains unknown. We hypothesized that c-Src and c-Yes might work in contrasting roles in endocytic vesicle-mediated trafficking, serving as molecular switches, to effectively disassemble and reassemble the old and the new BTB, respectively, to facilitate preleptotene spermatocyte transport across the BTB. Following siRNA-mediated specific knockdown of c-Src or c-Yes in Sertoli cells, we utilized biochemical assays to assess the changes in protein endocytosis, recycling, degradation and phagocytosis. c-Yes was found to promote endocytosed integral membrane BTB proteins to the pathway of transcytosis and recycling so that internalized proteins could be effectively used to assemble new BTB from the disassembling old BTB, whereas c-Src promotes endocytosed Sertoli cell BTB proteins to endosome-mediated protein degradation for the degeneration of the old BTB. By using fluorescence beads mimicking apoptotic germ cells, Sertoli cells were found to engulf beads via c-Src-mediated phagocytosis. A hypothetical model that serves as the framework for future investigation is thus proposed.

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