Abstract

Restricted (H re /+) male rats marked by a coat color pattern have normal testes at birth. By 9 days postpartum, testes of the mutant animals are smaller than normal and by approximately 90 days of age the animals are sterile. The genetically sterile testes are totally devoid of spermatogonial cells, spermatocytes, spermatids, and spermatozoa, with only Sertoli cells remaining in the seminiferous tubules. Cyclic AMP concentrations in the whole testes (and the seminiferous tubules) of the mutant males are approximately 10–35% greater than in testes of control males when tested at intervals from 5 to 120 days of age. The possible role of excess cyclic AMP in reducing the rate of mitotic division of spermatogonial cells while enhancing differentiation of spermatogonial cells into spermatozoa is discussed. Such a change in the respective rates of mitotic and meiotic divisions would ultimately deplete the mutant testes of all spermatogonial cells.

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